An astounding look at a rarely explored side of World War II. The story spotlights the era's atrocities and its characters' tribulations through a profoundly human lens.
Sean Strain, editor and publishing professional.
When war refuses to end ... will love simply fade away?
War is often told through the eyes of those who fight it. But A Guest of the Emperor reveals a different story-the quiet, enduring cost carried by those left behind.
When Rolf is declared Missing in Action in the Pacific, Faith is left with nothing but a letter and a promise she once made lightly. As months stretch into years of silence, hope becomes both her anchor and her burden. Waiting is no longer passive-it is a daily act of courage.
Jeanne's story is different, yet painfully familiar. When Arne vanishes into the machinery of war, life does what it always does-it moves forward. But memory has its own quiet persistence. Decades pass. Lives are rebuilt. Yet some loves refuse to be forgotten, like a pressed flower hidden in book - it is fragile and faded, but never discarded.
In homes across America, families cling to fragments-rumors, headlines, unanswered questions. "Missing in Action" becomes a cruel paradox: a reason to hope... and a reason to fear the worst. While history celebrates victories and heroes, the real toll of war unfolds in empty chairs, unopened letters, and hearts suspended between faith and despair.
And when the war finally releases its survivors, the silence does not end.
Because some stories are too painful to tell. Some wounds take a lifetime to face.
And some journeys-like Rolf's return to the past-require a different kind of bravery altogether.
A Guest of the Emperor is a deeply human portrait of love, loss, and resilience. It is a story of those whom history forgets-the ones who waited, who endured, and who carried on when the world moved forward without them.
For readers of historical fiction who seek emotional depth, untold perspectives, and the enduring power of love in the shadow of war.
Autorentext
Pastor Dave Mesaros began his career as an electrical engineer, spending fourteen years in the high-tech computer industry before answering a call to ministry. He served more than thirty years in several Lutheran congregations and taught theology at Tumaini University in Iringa, Tanzania.He has ministered to people at every intersection of life, gathering their stories over decades. Those encounters left an indelible mark and inform much of his writing, drawing characters and scenes from real lives in Africa, Slovakia, and the United States.The Guest of the Emperor grew from two such lives. Jeanne walked into his office with one and a half typed pages and said, "This is my story." After hours of interviews and careful research, Jeanne's account and Rolf's memoirs emerged as a moving portrait of ordinary people navigating extraordinary times.