
Shohel Rana
Bio
As a professional article writer for Vocal Media, I craft engaging, high-quality content tailored to diverse audiences. My expertise ensures well-researched, compelling articles that inform, inspire, and captivate readers effectively.
Stories (372)
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The Lost City Beneath the Sea
The Lost City Beneath the Sea For thousands of years, people have spoken of a city more beautiful, more powerful, and more advanced than any that came after it — Atlantis. A kingdom said to have vanished beneath the waves in a single day and night. Was it real, or only a legend?
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Earth 10 Million Years Ago
Ten million years ago, Earth was a place both familiar and alien. The continents had already taken their modern shape — Africa, Asia, and Europe were close to how they look today. But the creatures walking those lands were not yet us. Humanity was still a dream waiting to awaken.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Poets
The World 100 Million Years Ago
Imagine standing on Earth 100 million years ago. The world was almost unrecognizable. There were no humans, no cities, no continents shaped the way we see them now. The air was thicker, the temperature much warmer, and the planet was alive with creatures so large and strange that today they feel almost mythical.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Lost Colony of Roanoke: America’s Oldest Unsolved Mystery
“When they returned, the colony was gone. No bodies. No survivors. Only one word carved into a wooden post: CROATOAN.” In the summer of 1587, a group of 117 English men, women, and children set sail across the Atlantic, dreaming of a new life in the New World. Led by John White, they arrived on Roanoke Island, off the coast of present-day North Carolina. It was England’s first attempt at establishing a permanent settlement in America—a bold step toward expanding its empire across the ocean. But what began as a hopeful venture would soon become one of the greatest mysteries in history.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Forgotten Empire: The Rise and Fall of Mesopotamia
When we think about human history, we often picture grand empires like Rome, Persia, or Egypt. But long before them, a land between two rivers—the Tigris and Euphrates—birthed something far more profound: the first organized civilization known to mankind—Mesopotamia.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Vanished Village Beneath the Lake
On a crisp autumn morning in 1950, the people of Dana, Massachusetts, gathered in silence as bulldozers rolled into their streets. Children clutched their mothers’ hands, old men leaned on canes, and the echo of church bells rang for the last time. Within weeks, their homes, schools, and memories would be gone—buried beneath a vast man-made lake. The government called it progress. The people called it betrayal.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Vanished Colony of Roanoke
It began as a dream — the dream of a new world, of English settlers carving out a home in the wilderness of North America. But by the time rescue ships arrived three years later, the dream had turned into one of history’s greatest enigmas. The colony of Roanoke had vanished — every man, woman, and child gone without a trace, leaving behind only a single word carved into a wooden post: CROATOAN.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Lost Art of Thinking Deeply
We live in a time when our phones vibrate more than our thoughts do. Notifications, videos, updates — they all arrive faster than we can process them. We scroll, we react, we move on. But somewhere along the way, we’ve forgotten how to think deeply.
By Shohel Rana3 months ago in Fiction
The Whispering Trail
Lena tugged her jacket tighter against the crisp autumn breeze as she stepped onto the old forest trail. The leaves beneath her boots crackled like tiny secrets, and shafts of gold light filtered through the boughs overhead. She paused, closing her eyes, listening — there was a faint murmur in the hush, as though the woods themselves breathed.
By Shohel Rana4 months ago in Fiction
The Printing Revolution
The Spark That Changed Everything Imagine a world without newspapers, textbooks, or novels. A world where every book had to be copied by hand, letter by letter, page by page. In 15th-century Europe, this was reality. Books were precious, rare, and so expensive that only the wealthy or powerful could own them. Knowledge moved slowly, confined to monasteries and royal courts.
By Shohel Rana4 months ago in Fiction











