
About the Book
Book: The Way Back to Eden: Book 2 of the Jaguar Oracle Series Author: Kurt Mähler Genre: Magical Realism Release date: February 28, 2025
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About the Author

More from Kurt
The Way Back to Eden expands the Jaguar Oracle epic into a full-fledged human drama alongside the animal one. Who among the animals do you enjoy? Who among the humans do you identify with? A clue to courage for your calling lies in that intersection. Brazos Ben is based on a relative who built a three-story treehouse with running water and electricity. Just like we find in the story, he did so on sixty acres of bottomland beside a river, where he let most of his property go wild. It contained an old pecan orchard and an abandoned cabin. Papá Eli, a member of the old-school “gentleman mafia” of Mexico, is based on the actor Cesar Romero. Every plant, animal, moon phase, and constellation are the work of much research. I use an astronomy app called Starry Night Enthusiast 8, which I learned of from reading the profound scholarly work called The Great Christ Comet by Colin Nicholl, who used this app as a key aid in his attempt to determine the nature and trajectory of the Star of Bethlehem. While the animal characters are on a journey to “remember their names”—what Adam spoke when he named them—the human characters are on a quest to get “back to Eden.” High-tech rancher Tripp is leveraging money. The hermit Brazos Ben is letting his land go wild. Papá Eli is creating a glass arboretum where he hopes to retire alongside the jaguar. Chase the zoologist is in touch with the omens of creation. But the jaguar Oracle is on a deeper journey. He is trapped in a “mangarden” far from the Rio Grande Valley. He will need more than mere strength and skill to escape and return; he will need weakness and suffering. Can he drink the cup? Can he return to the Valley and restore the cats to their leadership (the ocelot, the bobcat, and the lost jaguarundi)? Can he bring the animal kingdom into a “final spring in their twilight days this side of Eden”? Read and discover. Perhaps it will inspire you to drink the cup heaven has offered you, too. His grace is sufficient. His power rests in our weakness. His blood is enough. This is our way back to Eden.Interview with the Author
- Do you read books in this genre? If so, who do you like to read?
Telling parables in Afghanistan caused me to discover how humans, as God’s image bearers, are “wired for stories” by the hand of our Creator. This led to reading George MacDonald’s Christian fantasy in order to experience the same encouragement his writings gave Lewis and Tolkien in their journey of becoming Christian fantasy authors, and it did indeed inspire me. This included books like The Golden Key and At the Back of the North Wind. I also returned to the roots of Christian poetry with an exploration of John Milton’s Paradise Lost and Dante’s Divine Comedy.
- If a reader were to ask you what author you are like, what would you answer?
C.S. Lewis, George MacDonald, and J.R.R. Tolkien. They picked up the prophetic tradition of the ancient Faith and clothed it with fresh, imaginative, poetic tales from the worlds familiar to them. I highly recommend Lewis’ Till We Have Faces as an example.
- What is your favorite book and why?
The Golden Key by George MacDonald. A rare gem. Simple and deep. Child-like and profound. Innocent, but a sword may pierce your heart. You can have it either way. It depends on your own heart, whether it is hungry or content with the way things are.
Because MacDonald presents the story as a fairy tale, you let your guard down. Mossy and Tangle’s quest passes through eons and meets characters from ancient epics. It seems, at times, to meander—yet it is at those moments, when you least expect it, that little epiphanies burst upon you.
Without meaning to, you find yourself customizing the children’s search for the golden key and their search for “the country whence the shadows fall” to your own life and its challenges.
Why is this one of my favorite books? Because poetic fiction, when done well, contains prophetic insight for the individual whose heart is open to their Creator. Each one is on a journey from trusting Him as Creator to obeying Him as Savior. Fiction, when submitted to the tradition of the parables that our Lord employed, gives the reader the opportunity to decide whether his heart is hungry or hardened. What is more, the work of fiction is to render an offering of life-giving beauty to the reader, such that, in a way different from lectures and how-to-manuals, he experiences joy-giving sorrow, healing of the heart, course-correction in one’s mindset, and prophetic insight into one’s calling.
- What is one thing readers would be surprised to learn about you?
My wife Karen and I raised our five children in Afghanistan for eleven years.
I am a public speaker on five continents and a well-respected international life coach, serving in places as challenging as Cuba, Persia, and North Korea.
My wife and I have been married since 1993 and raised our family in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, where they founded a community development agency. Collectively, we have served for twenty years in forty nations. We live in the emirate of Sharjah, near Dubai.
My roots include the Texas Gulf Coast, the Rio Grande Valley, the Heart of Texas, and New England.
- What inspired you to write this book?
The idea for The Way Back to Eden and the whole Jaguar Oracle series came from a black-and-white photo and a question.
The photo, dated January 1946, is of farmers and ranchers displaying what they believed to be the last jaguar in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, which they had hunted down and killed.
A few hours after seeing this photo, during a time of prayer about some troublesome matter I no longer remember, the question dropped into me: “What if a jaguar returned to the Rio Grande Valley?”
In The Way Back to Eden, in the chapter called The Photo, a main human character sees the photo in that book, and, as a result, is inspired in a dream that night. The idea for The Way Back to Eden and the whole Jaguar Oracle series came from a black-and-white photo and a question.
The photo, dated January 1946, is of farmers and ranchers displaying what they believed to be the last jaguar in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, which they had hunted down and killed. I saw it in a book called El Valle: The Rio Grande River Delta by Seth Patterson.
A few hours after seeing this photo, during a time of prayer about some troublesome matter I no longer remember, the question dropped into me: “What if a jaguar returned to the Rio Grande Valley?”
In The Way Back to Eden, in the chapter called “The Photo,” a main human character sees the photo in that book, and, as a result, is inspired in a dream that night.
Blog Stops
Vicky Sluiter, March 21 (Author Interview)
Simple Harvest Reads, March 22 (Author Interview)
For the Love of Literature, March 23 (Author Interview)
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, March 23
Fiction Book Lover, March 24 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, March 24
Tell Tale Book Reviews, March 25 (Author Interview)
Locks, Hooks and Books, March 26
Blossoms and Blessings, March 27 (Author Interview)
Artistic Nobody, March 28 (Author Interview)
Stories By Gina, March 29 (Author Interview)
Holly’s Book Corner, March 30
Jodie Wolfe – Stories Where Hope and Quirky Meet, March 31 (Author Interview)
A Reader’s Brain , April 1 (Author Interview)
Blogging with Carol, April 2
A Modern Day Fairy Tale, April 3 (Author Interview)
Giveaway
To celebrate his tour, Kurt is giving away the grand prize of a $50 Amazon gift card, a high-resolution digital map of the entire six-book tale, a high-resolution cover, and an audiobook copy of the book!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.