One Flame Many Flags

ebook Satanic Verses of Love

By Manfred Ayuk

cover image of One Flame Many Flags

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Many Flags, One Flame

She didn't win the seat. She opened the door. Amara Baptiste-Calderón was never meant to fit the mold. Born of two faiths, raised by three nations, and mother to a family stitched together by love rather than blood, she knew that America's promise was not a page in a textbook—it was a daily act of courage. When she runs for governor of a Southern state, few believe she'll win. When she does, they try to erase her. As she rises further—daring to challenge the presidency—Amara becomes both a beacon and a threat. Her race, her faith, her marriage, even her children—all become battlegrounds in a public war waged not just with smear campaigns and conspiracy theories, but with the nation's deepest, unspoken fears. Her opponents call her dangerous. They claim she doesn't belong. But Amara doesn't fight back with rage—she fights with radical visibility. From courtrooms to kitchen tables, from Shabbat candles to Sunday gospel, she stitches a new American narrative, one woven with multiplicity and mercy. Through a constellation of unforgettable scenes—an ambush debate, a whisper of betrayal, a viral lie that threatens her family—Amara stays rooted in truth. Her greatest acts of defiance are often the quietest: a bedtime prayer in Bayangui, a public silence after a smear, a child's hand in hers. She doesn't ask for power. She offers it back to the people. At the heart of Many Flags, One Flame is a love story—not just between Amara and her husband, David, but between a woman and the country that refused to fully see her. And yet, she stays. She fights. She builds. She mothers a nation even as it tries to unmother her. From a grassroots campaign to a near-presidency, from smear to statute, from concession speech to national legend, Amara's journey becomes a blueprint for a new kind of patriotism—one that refuses to choose between belonging and truth. Her final speech to Congress, delivered not in triumph but in unyielding clarity, becomes the most quoted address of a generation: "We built a home where no culture had to kneel. Where love spoke in many tongues, that was our protest. That was our power." Years later, when a statue is raised in her honor outside the Capitol, the inscription says not that she won, but that she made winning possible. A novel of fierce hope and quiet revolution, Many Flags, One Flame is about what it means to lead in a country that still struggles to believe all of its people belong. It is a meditation on legacy, family, and the courage to be seen in full color. For every reader who has ever asked, "Where do I fit in this story?" —Amara answers, Right here. With both hands on the door.

One Flame Many Flags