Description

At first I thought Konig’s Fire was a fiction about Nazi Germany, which it is.   But then some strange things happened, and I knew the story had jumped to fantasy.   And the spiritual significance of events is so powerful!   The publisher puts this under the class “Just Weird”.   I think I would say, “Just Weird, but Good!”

From the Publisher:

They Called Me Nebuchadnezzar   The Nazis have established a torture center in a mine at the heart of a Romanian forest. Here they interrogate prisoners and, sometimes, throw them into the furnace at the heart of the mine.   Only now, the primeval forest is rising against them, unleashing a preternatural army to besiege the great iron gate of the mine. The fearsome guards become terrified prisoners and the furnace itself burns with hungry anger against them.   Sascha König, a man they called Nebuchadnezzar, is their only hope. He is master of the furnace. All along, he has been Hitler’s ardent servant. But now…König is wrestling with demons of his own, and the Master of all fires is calling him to Himself through the haunting eyes of a little gypsy girl König did not save.

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A gold mine for readers who enjoy the blend of paranormal fantasy with one man’s desperate search for meaning and self-sacrifice.   Publishers Weekly

 

 

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