Alfredo O'Malley is an Irish writer, independent scholar, and self-described autodidact whose work examines the civilizations that history forgot or deliberately suppressed. Born in County Clare and educated through decades of voracious private study ranging across medieval history, archaeology, comparative religion, and the historiography of nomadic peoples, he has spent his career recovering the institutional and human complexity of states that conventional historiography has treated as marginal, transitional, or inconvenient. His approach combines the methodological rigour of academic historical scholarship with the narrative ambitions of literary nonfiction, producing work that takes the evidence seriously while insisting that serious evidence deserves serious prose. He is particularly drawn to civilizations whose erasure was deliberate - states and peoples whose disappearance from the historical record reflects the political requirements of the traditions that replaced them rather than any absence of historical significance. The Thirteenth Empire is his most ambitious work to date, the product of years of research across primary sources in translation, the accumulated scholarship of multiple national academic traditions, and the emerging archaeological literature from the Volga Delta and the Pontic steppe. He lives in the west of Ireland, where the Atlantic weather and the long memory of a colonized people keep his interest in the deliberately forgotten reliably sharp.