Friday, March 3, 2023

Poetry that touches the heart of spiritual struggle

A Cry for Mercy: Escape from the Unseen Dungeons by Peter Okonkwo is written from the perspective of a narrator struggling under spiritual bondage. The desperate cries to God touch on emotional and spiritual experiences with failure, loss, and despair. It reminds me of Job as he underwent trials that stripped him of family, wealth, and health. It raises the question of whether it is possible for man to grow to love God for himself and find fundamental contentment in life regardless of circumstances as the narrator questions his fate and grapples with sin in his life. He feels forgotten, speaks of his hopelessness, and calls to the Creator to come and give him something.

Cry for Mercy by Peter Okonkwo
 

“Is it not in your hands?

The key to my fortune, and fate?

How long shall you keep me

In the dungeon of despair?

I need a change I am fed up

With my present status.”

 

This poetic journey follows the narrator's wrestling with guilt as he sheds many tears “in the dungeons” of bondage as he seeks forgiveness. Amid his struggles, he seeks to blame something else for his plight. His flesh, obstacles in his way, the spiritual forces of darkness, and more as he wonders about his fortune, fate, and destiny. He questions whether he has mistakenly offended fortune and begs the Creator to plead with his fate to grant him comfort from his sorrows. But he feels forgotten and questions why the Creator is silent about all his trouble.

 

Cry for Mercy

 

Book Review: A Cry for Mercy

The poetry within the pages of A Cry for Mercy: Escape from the Unseen Dungeons by Peter Okonkwo echoes with cries for help from a dark place. It reflects human suffering and the journey to transcend it. It pulsates with moral energy, anger, spiritual insights, and distressed reflections. The cries for mercy are heart-wrenching and well-written as the narrator seeks divine intervention. As book 1 in this series, it paints a picture of the start of his spiritual journey. It draws the reader in with words that reflect exhaustion, tears, and a dearth of hope. The struggle is real and leads to the question many ask. What is my purpose on earth? I recommend this book to people who enjoy meditative lyric poetry lamenting the broader theme of the struggles of life, lack of reward for hard work, and the obstacles of life that prevent the good fortune they believe is promised them.

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As BookHookup, I am a longtime book reviewer. I received a free review copy of this book and have not received compensation for reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

 


About the Author Peter Okonkwo

Peter Okonkwo is a Nigerian writer, fatalist, publisher, editor, literary critic, spiritual philosopher, soon–to–be–novelist of Etean’s Destiny, and a certified orator from the Friendship Leadership Institute of Nigeria.

He is the author of six poetry collections: Ecstasy of the Dead; Fate, In the Dungeon of Doom; Whose Fault, Kismet or Impediment? and Escape from the Unseen Dungeons book series, (A Cry for Mercy, How the Demons Leave, and I Saw the Light)

Peter is gifted with the aptitude to explore and demystify certain difficult life issues through his thought–provoking, raw–arresting transcendent poetry. His works has been featured in notable literary magazines and newspaper, including the Australian Plumwood Mountain Journal, The Lagos Review, Ngiga Review, Hope Newspaper, among many others.

Peter is the host of the P. English Literature YouTube channel, where he reviews books and conducts interviews with authors around the world. His show has featured over 250 literature works from authors across the globe

 

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Riveting spy novel with thriller plot lines and political overtones

Emperor by John Fullerton reads like today’s news behind the news. This must-read thriller takes the reader behind the political curtains in Beijing and Washington, DC and delves into the world of international espionage and intrigue as events built toward WWIII. The narrative is so authentic and well-researched it reads like a prophetic foretelling of events before they unfold on the world stage.


 
Fullerton draws the reader in with a fast-paced introduction to believable characters caught up in undercover activities. A whistleblower deep inside the Beijing government leaks details to the West. A strong female protagonist and former NSA agent, Ava Shute, reluctantly accepts the challenge of making the information known because it is the right thing to do. On the other side of the scenario, an aging Chinese Emperor, fights ill health as he plots the invasion of Taiwan aiming to make one China unity his legacy.

Black Tide Book Tours

 

Book Review: Empire by John Fullerton

The detailed leaks read true and ratchet up suspense like a lit fuse. I recommend this book to those who enjoy war and military novels, and spy novels with thriller plot lines and political overtones. I give it a strong five stars. It’s authentic, unpredictable, and the techniques and espionage procedures used are convincing. It delivers gripping action, adventure, misdirection, and realistic characters you can sink your teeth into. Who can you trust? That may change as you turn the page. This spy thriller stays with you even after you finish the book. I didn’t see the end coming. Loved it.

As BookHookup, I am a long-time book reviewer and received a free review copy of this book in collaboration with Black Tide Book Tours. I have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

 


About Author John Fullerton

John Fullerton was, for a time, a ‘contract laborer’ for the UK’s Secret Intelligence Service, an experience that formed the basis of his recent Cold War spy trilogy. He’s lived or worked in 40 countries as a journalist and covered a dozen wars. Fullerton was employed by Reuters for 20 years with postings in Hong Kong, Delhi, Beirut, Nicosia, Cairo, and London. Emperor is his tenth novel. He lives in Scotland and has begun a new espionage series set in the UK and Germany. For more information check out his website at https://johnfullertonauthor.scot/