Olympus Project Books in Order
Part ofSydney Addae Books in OrderSee the Olympus Project books by Sydney Addae in order, with quick summaries, world background, and notes on how this series fits her larger universe.
Last updated: June 10, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
The Leviticus Club
by Sydney Addae
2018
A secret serum creates two very different kinds of altered humans, and neither group knows the other exists. When murder and military politics draw them together, alliance and collision become the same thing.
Series background & context
The Olympus Project is one of Sydney Addae's most conspiracy-heavy story lines. It moves away from classic wolf-pack structure and into a world of altered humans, secret military programs, old experimental serum, and people who have been turned into weapons by different hands for different reasons.
At the center of the setup is a sharp split between two groups linked by the same scientific nightmare. One side comes out of a modern military plan, with enlisted soldiers brought back from death by a serum and remade into highly capable operatives. The other traces back much farther, to human survivors of Liege experiments who escaped, hid, and built lives using powers they never asked for. The fact that these groups share chemical roots but not shared values gives the series its tension right away.
Same serum, very different histories.
That is what makes The Leviticus Club feel different from the shifter-led branches of Addae's universe. The story still overlaps with La Patron, but the questions are not mainly about pack law or mating rituals. They are about control, surveillance, survival, and what happens when institutions decide some bodies are useful only as tools. Addae uses murder investigation and crossover encounters with La Patron's extended family to bring those threads together.
The old altered survivors are especially interesting because they have lived with these changes for generations. They are not official soldiers. They are people who learned to survive long before anybody tried to put them in uniform. By contrast, the Olympus recruits are products of a newer system, renamed, retrained, and pointed toward a purpose they did not choose. When those groups meet, the conflict is not just physical. It is philosophical.
Nobody agrees on what power is for.
That difference gives the series a stronger science-fiction and thriller edge than some of Addae's other work. The world is full of handlers, secret programs, special skills, and uneasy bargains. Even when romance enters the picture, and it does, it has to fight through layers of mistrust and competing loyalties first.
What readers can expect from Olympus Project is a blend of paranormal suspense and action-heavy found-family storytelling. There are superhuman abilities, but they do not feel glamorous. Most of them come wrapped in loss, coercion, or history. The characters have to decide whether they will keep acting like the systems that made them, or whether they can build something better with the wreckage.
If the wolf side of Addae's catalog is about hidden nations, Olympus Project is about hidden programs. It is the part of her universe where the science is messy, the politics are secretive, and the line between protector and experiment is never as clear as anyone wants it to be.
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