The Prometheus Scripts

Where theory meets catastrophic experience. Occupational hazards, told by The Netis Family with unsparing, empathetic clarity. Pull up a chair. The fire’s on.

A long, panoramic bookshelf built into a matte black wall, filled exclusively with uniformly sized, spine-out books labeled “The Prometheus Files,” each spine numbered and tagged with short, cryptic titles like “Failure Protocols,” “Broken Circuits,” and “Second Chances.” Occasional objects break the rhythm: a precision brass gear, a glass jar containing charred circuit boards, a small stone obelisk engraved with flame motifs. Subtle, recessed LED strips above the shelves cast even, cool white light, creating clean lines and soft reflections along the shelf edges. Captured from a low, wide-angle perspective, the shelves appear to stretch into the distance, symbolizing a vast archive of stories. The photographic realism, sharp focus, and controlled color palette convey a professional, archival, almost scientific mood for the book series universe.
An abstract, symbolic “Prometheus” scene constructed entirely from objects on a desk: a small, glowing filament bulb lying on an open notebook, its warm amber light spilling across handwritten pages filled with equations and rough narrative outlines. Nearby, a length of charred black matchsticks forms the silhouette of a broken chain, while a sleek silver USB drive rests like a modern artifact. The workspace sits on a textured oak surface, with the background fading into soft darkness. The only illumination comes from the bulb and a faint overhead fill, producing dramatic contrast and long, cinematic shadows. Shot from a slightly elevated angle with shallow depth of field, the glowing bulb is the visual anchor. The photographic style is moody yet polished, conveying risk, innovation, and the consequences of sharing knowledge.
A weathered, slate-gray hardcover book titled “The Prometheus Saga” lying open on a dark walnut desk, its thick pages filled with dense, annotated text and faint diagrams of constellations and mechanical inventions. Around it rest a metal fountain pen, a small brass hourglass, and a worn leather notebook partially open with scribbled notes. Cool, directional light from an unseen desk lamp creates sharp highlights on the metallic pen clip and soft shadows in the page creases. Shot at eye level with a shallow depth of field, the book spine and title are in crisp focus while the background falls into a tasteful blur. The photographic realism and restrained color palette create a professional, contemplative mood suitable for a serious book series portfolio.
A meticulously arranged stack of three minimalist book mockups labeled “The Prometheus Saga – Volume I, II, III” in clean serif typography, standing upright on a smooth charcoal surface. Each cover features an abstract metallic emblem resembling a stylized flame intertwined with geometric circuitry, rendered in brushed silver against deep navy backgrounds. Soft, diffused studio lighting from both sides produces gentle reflections on the metallic emblem and subtle gradients across the covers. The background fades to a smooth, out-of-focus dark gray, emphasizing the books as the sole subject. Captured from a slightly elevated three-quarter angle with sharp focus throughout, the composition feels balanced and modern. The overall photographic style is sleek and professional, perfectly representing a cohesive, sophisticated book series brand.

Explore The Prometheus Book Series

Follow the Netis family across volumes that can be read in any order — or picked up and put down as life allows. Each one reveals new angles on work, mistakes, resilience, and the joy of loving people who drive you crazy. Against survival mode. Only living. Living loudly. Living messily. Living together.

A close-up of a heavy, industrial-looking metal tablet lying on a concrete workbench, its matte-black surface etched with the words “Real Stories, Real Mistakes, Real Talk.” Fine scratches and scuffs cover the metal, suggesting long-term use and hard-earned experience. Beside it sit a cluster of precise tools: a caliper, a mechanical pencil, and a small steel ruler, all aligned neatly. Overhead, neutral studio lighting casts crisp, controlled shadows and clean highlights along the metal edges, emphasizing texture without harsh glare. Framed with a rule-of-thirds composition and moderate depth of field, the text engraving is tack sharp while the far edge of the bench gently blurs. The photographic realism and subdued tones create a grounded, honest, professional atmosphere reflecting the site’s tagline.

Our Mistakes — In Book Form

The Treaty of Fire: if Prometheus had learned to negotiate. Short but complete negotiating manual

Occupational Hazard!!! Prometheus burning inside out? The devastating aftermath of the burnout and how to escape it.

Next in line

Prometheus …

We ‘re on Fire… more coming… not soon enough

Prometheus …

We ‘re on Fire… more coming… not soon enough

The Readers’ Hangout

A carefully staged flat-lay of a “Netis Family Story Lab” workspace on a wide, matte charcoal tabletop. At the center, a large, open project journal displays a detailed storyboard grid and neatly written notes labeled “The Prometheus Saga Concept.” Surrounding it are organized objects: a digital voice recorder, color-coded sticky tabs, an old brass compass, and a precision mechanical keyboard with soft white backlighting barely visible at the edge. Overhead, diffused studio lighting creates even illumination, highlighting paper textures and subtle reflections on metal surfaces without harsh hotspots. The composition is symmetrical yet relaxed, with a moderate depth of field keeping every tool sharp. The photographic, clean, and modern aesthetic projects professionalism and deliberate craftsmanship, suggesting a real family workshop where complex stories are methodically developed and refined.

Reviews welcome. Praise? Love it. Criticism? We’ll probably laugh about it over frappé. Just don’t be boring. We deal with enough occupational hazards already.

Who do you think you are?
(Go ahead. Sign your review. We dare you. Or don’t. We’ll probably review your review anyway.)

A long, panoramic bookshelf built into a matte black wall, filled exclusively with uniformly sized, spine-out books labeled “The Prometheus Files,” each spine numbered and tagged with short, cryptic titles like “Failure Protocols,” “Broken Circuits,” and “Second Chances.” Occasional objects break the rhythm: a precision brass gear, a glass jar containing charred circuit boards, a small stone obelisk engraved with flame motifs. Subtle, recessed LED strips above the shelves cast even, cool white light, creating clean lines and soft reflections along the shelf edges. Captured from a low, wide-angle perspective, the shelves appear to stretch into the distance, symbolizing a vast archive of stories. The photographic realism, sharp focus, and controlled color palette convey a professional, archival, almost scientific mood for the book series universe.

Reviews welcome. Praise? Love it. Criticism? We’ll probably laugh about it over frappé. Just don’t be boring. We deal with enough occupational hazards already.

Who do you think you are?
(Go ahead. Sign your review. We dare you. Or don’t. We’ll probably review your review anyway.)

An abstract, symbolic “Prometheus” scene constructed entirely from objects on a desk: a small, glowing filament bulb lying on an open notebook, its warm amber light spilling across handwritten pages filled with equations and rough narrative outlines. Nearby, a length of charred black matchsticks forms the silhouette of a broken chain, while a sleek silver USB drive rests like a modern artifact. The workspace sits on a textured oak surface, with the background fading into soft darkness. The only illumination comes from the bulb and a faint overhead fill, producing dramatic contrast and long, cinematic shadows. Shot from a slightly elevated angle with shallow depth of field, the glowing bulb is the visual anchor. The photographic style is moody yet polished, conveying risk, innovation, and the consequences of sharing knowledge.

Reviews welcome. Praise? Love it. Criticism? We’ll probably laugh about it over frappé. Just don’t be boring. We deal with enough occupational hazards already.

Who do you think you are?
(Go ahead. Sign your review. We dare you. Or don’t. We’ll probably review your review anyway.)

A weathered, slate-gray hardcover book titled “The Prometheus Saga” lying open on a dark walnut desk, its thick pages filled with dense, annotated text and faint diagrams of constellations and mechanical inventions. Around it rest a metal fountain pen, a small brass hourglass, and a worn leather notebook partially open with scribbled notes. Cool, directional light from an unseen desk lamp creates sharp highlights on the metallic pen clip and soft shadows in the page creases. Shot at eye level with a shallow depth of field, the book spine and title are in crisp focus while the background falls into a tasteful blur. The photographic realism and restrained color palette create a professional, contemplative mood suitable for a serious book series portfolio.

Reviews welcome. Praise? Love it. Criticism? We’ll probably laugh about it over frappé. Just don’t be boring. We deal with enough occupational hazards already.

Who do you think you are?
(Go ahead. Sign your review. We dare you. Or don’t. We’ll probably review your review anyway.)

Drop us a line; we don’t bite…Much

Send a note. Refund? Not gonna happen. But we’ll still write back — between homework, work, and the desserts we keep stealing from Vicky

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Quoted for inspirational purposes. All rights reserved to the Kazantzakis estate