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đź“– Full Book Blurb (Back Cover Text)
Before the plagues. Before the wilderness. There was a family—and a promise.
The Moses Chronicles: Prelude is biblical historical fiction rooted in reverence and imagination. Set in Egypt just after the death of Jacob, also known as Israel, this novel explores the legacy he leaves behind through the fractured, powerful, and deeply human relationships of his sons, nephews, and the women who love them.
Joseph, once a slave and now Vizier of Egypt, must lead his brothers through their father’s burial—and their own regrets. Twelve sons, destined to become tribes, must reckon with guilt, rivalry, and the meaning of being chosen. As they journey back to Canaan, the political winds in Egypt begin to shift. Joseph’s name is fading. The gods of Egypt stir. And a new Pharaoh may not remember the Hebrew who once saved the empire.
Told through the voices of Joseph, Dinah, Asenath, and others whose history has been nearly forgotten, Prelude brings emotional depth and spiritual weight to the early lives of the people who would one day follow Moses. You’ll walk beside them in moments of mourning, confrontation, healing, and quiet resistance.
This is not just the beginning of a series. It’s the threshold of a nation.
"Reading The Moses Chronicles:Prelude felt like watching scripture breathe. What struck me most was the raw humanity in Israel’s blessings—flawed sons, fierce love, and divine destiny colliding in unforgettable drama. This is a must-read for lovers of sacred storytelling."
"The Moses Chronicles: Prelude offers a refreshingly restrained and historically grounded entry into the world of Exodus—without rushing into the anticipated and expected themes of slavery and plagues. What sets this first volume apart is its commitment to a slow, deliberate buildup. The Hebrews are not yet oppressed; they live under a fading legacy of Joseph's influence, in a society where political tensions are simmering but not yet explosive. The author wisely focuses on what could have actually happened in the Pharaoh's palace, the intrigue, the Egyptian power dynamics, and the quiet shifts that will eventually make deliverance necessary. It’s a rational and thought-provoking beginning that respects both the biblical text and the intelligence of the reader, setting a strong foundation for the deeper drama to come."
"The imagination of the setup of the story line of this book is nothing short of the great thoughts put on paper by the author. The tone and step-by-step storyline are so captivating that you can't stop reading."
"The Moses Chronicles: Prelude invites you to follow the biblical first family through their struggles to maintain faith in an ever-changing world. As a Jewish person, I personally connected to that storyline."
“Masterful Biblical storytelling! The Moses Chronicles is a great way to bring Biblical stories to life.It did that for me in a new way”
"In ministry school, I learned to close my eyes and immerse myself in the text. The retelling in "The Moses Chronicles: Prelude!" doesn't stray from Scripture, it draws me closer into the space between Scripture and story in ways that feel surprisingly like my own humanity - jealousy, uncertainty, unforgiveness, anger, weeping, love, faith, and forgiveness - making the characters feel more relatable. "
With Pharaoh’s blessing, Joseph leads the greatest funeral procession Egypt has ever seen.
Dignitaries. Chariots. Officers. Brothers reunited.
But not all who travel with them have come to mourn.
In The Moses Chronicles: Prelude, Chapters 7 through 14 take you deep into this legendary journey—from the fields of Goshen to the tombs of Canaan. As Joseph and his brothers keeps their oath to bury their father, unseen forces move in the shadows. Two spies hide among the attendants, sent by the Egyptian priests who fear Joseph’s power. A second group of assassins follows, bearing the grudge of a rival nation. Amid the grief and reverence lies betrayal, danger, and a moment that could end everything Elohim has built.
Yet the sons of Israel remember who they are. Brothers not just by blood, but by covenant. The mourning becomes a moment of glory. The burial becomes a battlefield.
The legacy of Israel is carried on the shoulders of twelve men who were once separated, and are now restored.
Moses was raised in royal robes
but fed on Hebrew prayers.
In Book Three: Divided Hearts,
he walks between two worlds—torn by identity,
haunted by whispers in Goshen,
and called by a God whose silence is louder than Pharaoh’s praise.
But heaven will not stay silent.
In Book Four: The Reckonings,
the river turns to blood.
The gods tremble.
And a stammering prophet returns—
not to plead for mercy,
but to declare judgment.
⚡ The Moses Chronicles continues this fall
with two powerful volumes—
one about the cost of becoming,
and one about the fire that finally breaks the chains.