Ulysses' Bow: A Seven Fires Mystery
Book Details
Author(s)Jason Lee Willis
ISBN / ASIN1449559972
ISBN-139781449559977
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank5,533,789
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
"The enemy of my enemy is my friend." As Sheriff of Wanagiyata County, Brian Forsberg knows his enemy well, but he spent his entire career gathering evidence for an arrest that never materialized. Knowing that his enemy has eluded him for three decades, Brian finally confronts the person that had seemingly gotten away with murder back in 1972. It was the fall of 1972 when Brian returned to the serene lake community of Split Rock after serving in the Vietnam War. Shortly after his return, strange events turn him from hero into suspect. His friendship with troubled teenager Karson Surdy, whose father has recently been declared Missing in Action, soon ensnares him in a web of lies, deceit, and murder that haunt him for his entire career. Part murder-mystery and part supernatural-thriller, the Seven Fires Chronicles takes the reader on a spiritual and temporal journey from the remote logging town of Split Rock, Minnesota to the battlefields of Vietnam, and even to the rocky shores of thirteenth-century Nova Scotia. While each novel features a modern protagonist dealing with issues affecting the present, the reader will learn along with the characters that there is an even greater mystery surrounding the pristine Lake Wanagiyata, which the Dakota called ‘Place of Souls.‘ Framed by the ancient Anishinaabe prophecies of The Seven Fires, each of the seven novels sheds more light into ancient events that are not yet done shaping the present and future. One of the unique features of The Seven Fires Chronicles is the concept of ‘Synchronicity,’ dubbed by philosopher Carl Jung. Synchronicity basically tries to show the connection between two seemingly unrelated events. In the series, characters ranging from devout Christians to sophisticated atheists begin to realize that their lives are intricately connected, and sometimes, not even death can break those connections. So rather than telling the story in a traditional, chronologically-ordered narrative, The Seven Fire Chronicles jump back and forth in time in order to show that Good and Evil sometimes change depending on a character’s perspective.

