Hendrik F. Meyer
Hendrik F. Meyer was born in Heidelberg, Germany, in 1963 under his birth name, Wolfgang Erich Wiegand. He was raised within a typical middle-class family; his father was an engineer at Siemens and his mother worked in the purchasing department of a chemical company. After elementary school, he attended as high school the Hebel Gymnasium in nearby Schwetzingen, where he earned his high school diploma. He then studied at the University of Mannheim and graduated with a degree in business administration.
He has been married for over 25 years; the marriage has unfortunately been childless.
After completing his studies, he worked for many years as a controller and financial manager, often in a management position, for a variety of large, international companies.
At some point, he discovered his calling as a writer and began writing novels in his spare time, publishing them under a pseudonym either through small publishers or via self-publishing. In his early fifties, he gave up his bread job to devote himself entirely to writing.
He was baptized as a Christian and raised in the Roman Catholic faith. Yet he realized early on that Christianity must be a lie, but that atheism was not the truth either. A turning point in his life came when he found a stone on a Baltic Sea beach engraved with runes and a triskelion, the meaning of which initially eluded him. Eventually, his god Euródin revealed to him what the design meant: the three gods Euródin, Vili, and Vé, who consecrate the souls of their primordial peoples—the Europeans, Africans, and Asians—and keep them in their respective paradises after the death of their bearers.
That made him write the novel ‘We Children of Euródin’, which he self-published because no publisher was willing to take it on, first in German, and then translated it into English and published the English version himself as well. The novel provides a detailed account of the new religion, which he refers to as ‘The Confession’ or ‘Tritheism’.
He currently divides his time between the coast of the Baltic Sea and southern Germany.
