Reading Sample in ENGLISH: Sample preliminary

“Since the dawen of time, there have been these three gods in the universe: Euródin and the alien gods Vili and Vé.”

According to the Edda, Odin and his two brothers Vili and Vé created the world together and rule it. But this is only partly true, as the former investment banker Siebenthal discovers at the end of his lifelong search for God. For they neither created the universe, nor do they rule it together. Instead, each of the three spirit beings creates a connection to the newborn souls of their own primordial people: Vili thus consecrates the souls of the Africans, Vé those of the Asians, and Odin, whom Siebenthal therefore now calls Euródin, takes care of the Europeans.

But realizing that is not enough. Euródin appoints Siebenthal as his prophet and commissions him to found a church and exhort his soul children to unite and preserve themselves until Ragnarök—the apocalypse predicted by the Edda, from whose ashes a new, better world for all Europeans will one day arise.

Armin Weskamp, a family entrepreneur who has been struck by a private disaster, is supposed to help him. But he hesitates for fear of being pilloried as a racist. When his impatient teenage daughter Anngrit secretly founds a cult at her school, it almost leads to a catastrophe. Armin must make a decision that will change his life—and perhaps that of all Europeans.

***

The new religion, which the author calls Tritheism, was revealed to him by Euródin following the discovery of an artifact. Every person of European descent must follow it, as it is their only hope for salvation and the survival of their people.

A novel about the God of Europeans and the future of Europe.