Krma
"Krma" is a mythological speculative novel that dares to ask what happens when history's conquerors are stripped of their monuments and thrown into a cosmic tribunal. Genghis Khan, Alexander the Great, and Napoleon Bonaparte appear here not as simple villains or heroes, but as figures caught inside a grand metaphysical experiment where karma itself may be measurable.
We root the story in a mythic frame, not a history lesson. The real lives of these rulers were far more tangled, contested, and troubling than any single narrative can contain. If this book sends you toward the historians and scholars who wrestle with their full humanity - their brutality, brilliance, and contradictions - then it has done part of its work. "Krma" is honest about what it is: a story that borrows their shadows to illuminate questions of power, consequence, and judgment.
Layered over this mythic gallery is a thread of speculative quantum physics. Research in quantum sensing and entanglement inspires the fictional technology at the heart of the novel: instruments that claim to detect "divine energy signatures," track metaphysical residue, and capture echoes of moral consequence. None of these devices exist, of course, but by treating them as if they did, the book explores whether justice could ever be quantified - and what might be lost if it were.
The Order of the Infinite Hand, Magnus Voss, Eli Navarro, and every modern figure you meet on the page are inventions. They stand as witnesses, accomplices, and skeptics inside a universe where gods may intervene, but humans still make the choices. Only the goddess Karma herself is presented as truly real, the unseen gravity pulling on every decision.
"Krma" is for readers who enjoy historical myth in novel form, science-touched fantasy, and morally charged stories that refuse easy answers. Enter expecting conquest and judgment; stay for a meditation on responsibility that lingers long after the last page closes.