Publisher's Synopsis
Universities announce that there are no more subjects forbidden to modern writers. However, I cannot find a single contemporary book addressing the prophetic genre, including not only blessings but also curses. As Unamuno asserted, atheists are numerous, but superstition is even more so.
Buñuel used to contradict his atheist friends by challenging them to come out into the streets to curse God. None dared to do so. The cause is primitive; our ancestors worshipped the Goddess of Fortune for thousands of years before religions were formalized with the invention of writing.
We are afraid to bless or curse because we see the future as an unknown region, subject to unseen forces. "King of Kings" takes up the prophetic genre and ends with a curse. It took me eleven years to formulate it, and I wouldn't have done it if it weren't for the Creator himself who inspires me. How naive I was to believe that God wanted me to be another obscure writer, removed from worldly bustle! I am a writer, but also an actor, and over the past year, the Lord has asked me to perform, incarnating most of the gods of the world; but that will be the subject of a documentary.
It is God who wants to teach all mankind that he who acts well and is gentle in forgiving others obtains the invisible favors of heaven and hell.
But how? Is not heaven the enemy of hell? Will say the fanatics of certain sects. Already in the book of Job, Lucifer appears as another son of God, charged with tempting men. William Blake spoke of the nuptials of Heaven and Hell, and Swedenborg before him prescribed that when we die, we are free to become angels or demons. In my book "Confessions of the Dead," the reader will find more information about these mysteries.
On the other hand, how to react when God manifests himself before me in all his splendor and anoints me as a prophet? When even nature celebrates this with fluttering doves and a staircase of clouds from my window to the zenith?