Memory isn’t a fairytale. It’s cold water filling your lungs while everyone insists you’re breathing just fine.
In the idyllic suburbs of 1990s Sweden, the red-tiled roofs and orderly hedges hide a brutal reality. For six-year-old Pontus, safety is a myth, and home is a battlefield ruled by an invisible enemy: The Fog. The Fog is a searing work of autofiction that peels back the layers of a fractured childhood. It invites the reader into the dark cellar of memory, lighting a candle to reveal the hidden corners of a family dissolving under the pressure of the economic crisis and unspoken addiction.
What This Book Explores Inside The Fog, readers will find a harrowing journey through the cracks of the welfare state:
The Fog as an Antagonist More than just a metaphor for alcoholism or neglect, the Fog is a physical manifestation of parental absence. It is the sour-sweet smell of a home where reality shifts without warning, forcing a child to develop hypervigilance to survive.
The Sibling Bond: "Your Hand in Mine" At its core, this is a story of two children against the world. Pontus has one mission: to shield his little sister, Lovisa, from the chaos. It explores the terrifying burden of "parentification"—when a child is forced to become the adult.
Dark Nostalgia & The 90s Crisis Set against the backdrop of the Swedish banking collapse (when interest rates hit 500%), the story deconstructs the myth of the "perfect" Swedish society. It is a gritty look at the era of Tamagotchis and O’boy, stripped of its innocence.
The Psychology of Survival How does a child navigate a world where adults are the monsters? The book examines the defense mechanisms we build to endure trauma and the scars that remain long after the Fog has lifted.
Who This Book Is For The Fog is written for readers who appreciate:
Gritty Autofiction in the vein of Shuggie Bain and The Glass Castle.
Nordic Realism that moves beyond crime thrillers into psychological depth.
Family Dramas dealing with resilience, trauma, and the unbreakable bond between siblings.
Coming-of-Age stories that refuse to look away from the darkness.
A Story of Truth Disguised as Fiction While presented as a novel, The Fog occupies the blurred line between memoir and fiction. P.R. Spawnberg utilizes the narrative freedom of storytelling to capture the emotional truth of a stolen childhood. It is not just a recounting of events, but a visceral recreation of how it felt to live inside the Fog.
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Peace is not a promise. It is enforced.
For years, global instability grew as deterrence weakened. Borders eroded, conflicts escalated, and the threat of major war returned—while political elites insisted that restraint and appeasement would keep the peace. History has shown the opposite: weakness invites conflict.
The Peacemaker: Why Trump Will Receive the Peace Prize 2026 presents a provocative geopolitical analysis of how strength, leverage, and decisive leadership reshape global order. The book argues that modern peace is not built on rhetoric, but on outcomes—wars prevented, conflicts contained, and deterrence restored.
This is not speculation detached from reality. It is a forward-looking examination grounded in real events, historical precedent, and strategic trends already in motion.
Inside The Peacemaker, readers will find a structured analysis of how peace is achieved in a volatile world:
Averting Nuclear Escalation
How decisive intervention and high-pressure diplomacy prevent catastrophic conflict between nuclear powers.
Economic Power as a Peace Tool
Why energy dominance, trade leverage, and economic realism matter more than endless negotiations.
Ending Endless Conflicts
How a results-based doctrine reframes intervention, deterrence, and negotiated settlements in modern wars.
The “Trump Test”
A new benchmark for leadership—judging leaders not by speeches, but by the wars they prevent.
Sovereignty and Stability
Why secure borders and national self-interest remain prerequisites for lasting peace.
Blending political commentary with forward-looking analysis, the book challenges prevailing narratives about diplomacy, power, and global leadership.
The Peacemaker is written for readers interested in:
Geopolitics and international relations
Foreign policy and deterrence theory
Modern history and strategic leadership
Power dynamics in a multipolar world
It is designed for readers who believe peace must be measured by results, not intentions.
The central thesis of the book—that Donald Trump will receive the Nobel Peace Prize in 2026—is presented as a political projection, not a statement of fact. The book makes its case through analysis, not advocacy, inviting readers to evaluate the argument on its merits.
Whether one agrees or disagrees, The Peacemaker offers a compelling framework for understanding how peace is enforced in the modern era.
The Peacemaker: Why Trump Will Receive the Peace Prize 2026
Available now on Amazon.
👉 Order the Kindle Edition on Amazon