The Past Is Never Past
Richly researched novels spanning five centuries and four continents
Ricardo Gómez's historical novels are driven by a single conviction: understanding where we came from is inseparable from understanding who we are. Drawing on decades of research across Latin American, European, and American history, his fiction restores forgotten voices to the record — indigenous leaders, colonial rebels, Cornish miners, independence heroes, and Pacific Northwest settlers building a world at the edge of a continent.
Port Townsend, Washington, 1851. Two waters meet here — the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Puget Sound — and for a few decades, the men who arrived first were certain this would be the greatest city on the Pacific Coast. They platted streets that still exist, built brick buildings that still stand, and filed claims on land they had no right to take.
The S'Klallam and Chemakum peoples had lived at this confluence for thousands of years before the treaties — treaties signed under pressure, in languages the signatories did not speak, ceding territories they had no framework for imagining as ownable. Where Two Waters Meet tells the story of Port Townsend's founding years through witnesses on both sides of that transaction: the settlers who believed they were building civilization, and the people who watched their world being renamed.
A novel rooted in the place where Ricardo Gómez now lives and writes — and in the history that the town's Victorian facades have always been covering.
Paperback, Kindle & Audiobook https://mybook.to/WhereTwoWatersMeet
In the summer of 2024, a retired attorney discovered a cedar chest in a family cabin on Mitkof Island, Alaska. Inside: the complete file from United States of America v. James Brennan, Case No. 559-KB, District of Alaska, 1918–1919. Depositions. Affidavits. A coerced newspaper retraction. A bond inventory listing everything a man owned. A dismissal order that cleared his name and apologized for nothing.
He brought the chest to a novelist's lecture in Port Townsend in February 2026. The novelist was Roberto Gomez — Nicaraguan, a reader of Sergio Ramírez, someone who recognized in the file's grammar of passive constructions and scattered witnesses a pattern he had seen in other archives, in other countries, in other centuries.
The novel that resulted is built entirely from the documents in that chest. Five women — June Edwards, Gene White, Margaret Perry, Georgie Waldon, and Ora Gordan — returned to Alaska in September 1918 to testify under oath about the night of July 23rd. The Bucket of Blood is the account of how those words survived, what they contain, and why they still matter.
Medieval Spain was the most intellectually fertile place in the Western world — a crossroads where Jewish, Muslim, and Christian scholars translated the accumulated wisdom of antiquity into the languages that would fuel the Renaissance. Ricardo Gómez's Iberian novels live inside that world: the alliances that made it possible, the forces that destroyed it, and the people who refused to let the knowledge disappear.
The Translators of Toledo (trilogy) Toledo, 1080–1108. Three families — a Jewish astronomer, a Muslim navigator, a Mozarab Christian scholar — forge a secret covenant to preserve the knowledge of ages as Christian reconquest reshapes Spain forever. Across three novels, their children carry that covenant forward through crusade, invasion, and betrayal, encoding wisdom in embroidery patterns and navigator's charts, smuggling manuscripts to safety beneath the noses of those who would burn them. Each volume includes a scholarly historical essay bridging fiction and rigorous research.
If you enjoyed The Name of the Rose, The Pillars of the Earth, or People of the Book — this trilogy is for you.
Toledo, 1080. Alfonso VI's Christian armies are closing in, and Jewish astronomer Abraham Cohen has read the catastrophe in the stars. As the siege tightens, he forges an unlikely alliance with Yusuf al-Qurtubi, a Muslim navigator haunted by his years at sea, and Diego Medina, a Mozarab Christian scholar caught between two worlds. Together with their families — including a physician who defies the boundaries placed on women and three children whose friendship crosses every divide — they create a secret covenant to preserve the manuscripts and scientific knowledge that political and religious powers would see destroyed. Toledo falls. The promises of tolerance begin to crumble. But the covenant holds. [Kindle $7.99 · Paperback $15.00 · Kindle Unlimited → https://mybook.to/CityofThreeFaiths]
Toledo, 1086. Archbishop Bernard arrives with a mandate to purge "infidel learning" from the city. But in the shadow of converted mosques and watched streets, the covenant has other plans. As the famous School of Translators takes shape under unlikely Church patronage, Abraham, Yusuf, Diego, and their children walk a razor's edge — satisfying suspicious clerics while smuggling philosophical texts to safety, encoding medical knowledge in women's embroidery patterns, calculating routes to lands beyond any map. When a zealous monk begins investigating their activities, they face an impossible choice: abandon their life's work, or risk everything they love. Set against the First Crusade and the Almoravid invasion, this is the trilogy at full force. [Kindle $7.99 · Paperback $15.00 · Kindle Unlimited → https://mybook.to/SchoolOfTranslators]
Toledo, 1108. King Alfonso VI is dying. The fragile peace that allowed Christian, Jewish, and Muslim scholars to work together is cracking under the weight of Queen Urraca's troubled reign and her husband's ambitions. Abraham Cohen, now in his final years, races to complete his Testament — a philosophical foundation for knowledge preservation meant to guide future generations through crises he will not live to see. When betrayal strikes from within their own ranks and the Chamber of Echoes falls to soldiers, the covenant scatters across three continents. But Abraham has embedded one final, audacious contingency in his Testament: navigator Yusuf's revolutionary calculations suggesting lands beyond the western ocean — knowledge that may one day guide refugees to shores no European map has yet marked. [Kindle $7.99 · Paperback $15.00 · Kindle Unlimited → https://mybook.to/SeedsForTheFuture]
Granada, 1492. As the last Muslim stronghold falls to Catholic forces, four unlikely conspirators hatch an audacious plan: steal Columbus's navigational secrets and sail west, carrying the accumulated wisdom of eight centuries of coexistence in Al-Andalus to whatever lies beyond the Atlantic. Ibrahim al-Zarqali, a physician whose healing arts cross every religious boundary. Samuel Cohen, an astronomer whose calculations rival any court scholar. Zahra al-Rundi, sole survivor of Ronda's brutal conquest, carrying secrets that could save or damn them all. And Ismail al-Qurtubi, a naval commander tasked with navigating the truly impossible. Their expedition carries more than refugees — it carries the Andalusian Covenant itself, a document imagining a society where Islamic mathematics converses with Aztec astronomy, where Jewish physicians learn from Taíno healers, where leadership depends on knowledge rather than bloodline or creed. From the courts of Tenochtitlan to the highlands of the Inca, this is alternate history at its most ambitious: a sweeping epic that asks what 1492 could have meant, and what it still might.
A companion novel to The Translators of Toledo trilogy — the descendants of Toledo's covenant, carrying its promise into the New World.
Historical Fantasy
Audiobook - Kindle - Paperback
English → https://mybook.to/AndalusianCovenant
Spanish → https://mybook.to/PactoAndalusi
Spain, 1490. In the shadow of the Inquisition, Jewish merchant Gonzalo Palencia signs his family's conversion papers — knowing that the documents that save them will also erase them. What the Church cannot see, it cannot burn. So begins a legacy of three ledgers: one for officials, one for allies, one for truths that must never be found. His daughter Mariana inherits the weight of impossible choices. His grandson Juan carries forged papers across the Atlantic to the mountains of Nueva Granada, where he discovers that Colombia's indigenous peoples have been hiding their own truths in plain sight for generations. And Juan's son Cristóbal, born into all three worlds at once, must weave them together before colonial suspicion tears everything apart. In present-day Bogotá, a woman named Cuchu — tracing her Spanish citizenship application — discovers a tarnished silver ring in her grandmother's belongings and realizes the paper trail was never just bureaucracy. It was survival, encoded in margins and margins, waiting five hundred years to be read.
Historical Fiction
Kindle - Paperback - Audiobook
English → https://mybook.to/PaperCrown
Spanish → https://mybook.to/CoronaDePapel
Three novels recovering the heroes of Colombia's fight for independence — their lives, contradictions, and legacies.
Three novels — written in Spanish — recovering the heroes of Colombia's fight for independence. Each restores a figure that official history has minimized, distorted, or erased. The first two are co-authored with Colombian scholars; all three are grounded in deep historical research.
(with Mauricio Beltrán)
Una noche de 1793, un hombre arriesgó todo por una idea. Antonio Nariño tenía fortuna, posición y una familia que adoraba — pero cuando sus manos tocaron las páginas de la Declaración de los Derechos del Hombre, supo que su vida cambiaría para siempre. What began as a clandestine translation in the dim light of his printing press became the spark that ignited a continent. Told through the voices of those who loved him, followed him, and lost him — his wife Magdalena who kept the flame of resistance burning while he languished in prison, the mestizo musician who built a spy network through melody, the freed slave who became a soldier of liberty — this is not just the story of a hero. It is the story of what ideals cost when pursued to their final consequence: thirty years of imprisonment, a confiscated fortune, a wife dead in his absence, children divided by war.
Kindle - Paperback
Spanish: https://mybook.to/EcosDeLibertad
Quito, 1797: a girl marked by the scandal of her birth is locked in a convent. But behind stone walls, among forbidden books and dreams of freedom, a revolutionary is born. Lima, 1822: a woman married to a respectable Englishman abandons everything — fortune, reputation, security — for a man and a cause: Simón Bolívar and the independence of the Americas. Bogotá, 1828: when conspirators come to kill the Liberator in the dead of night, only she stands in their way. With her body. With her voice. With her defiance. Narrated through unexpected voices — the streets of Quito that watched her grow, the letters that guarded her secrets, the window through which Bolívar escaped — this novel restores to Manuelita the place that was stolen from her: the center of her own story. Not the story of a woman who loved a hero. The story of a heroine history tried to erase.
Kindle - Paperback
Spanish: https://mybook.to/ManuelitaSaenz
(with Guillermo Padilla)
A controversial and complex figure that dominant Colombian historical narrative has vilified, whitewashed, and marginalized — this novel rescues him from oblivion. Of Pijao indigenous roots, Melo rose from the battlefields of independence to the presidency of Colombia, then fell into exile in Central America and Mexico. This historical novel explores what official accounts omit: how his indigenous roots shaped his worldview, his internal conflict when he seized power by force, and his unbreakable commitment to the poor, the artisans, and the indigenous communities. Not a biography — a historical re-creation that illuminates the ideas and contributions of a contradictory and fascinating leader, offering a new perspective on a crucial period in the formation of Colombian and Latin American identity.
Kindle - Paperback
Spanish: https://mybook.to/JMMeloGuerrero
The Cartographer's Daughter: The Atlas of Unwritten Futures
July 1822. The two men who freed South America from Spanish rule meet in secret. What they say to each other will shape a continent's destiny — and remains one of history's greatest mysteries. When her father is murdered by Spanish soldiers, María Suárez inherits an impossible gift: an atlas that shows not what will happen, but what could happen. Every choice branches into infinite possibilities. Every path carries its own price. Disguised as a male clerk, María infiltrates the armies of revolution, serving first the fiery visionary Simón Bolívar, then the methodical strategist José de San Martín — witness to their historic meeting in Guayaquil, the encounter that will determine whether a continent finds unity or shatters into fragments. But the atlas shows her a third possibility, hidden in ancient ruins older than the Inca, where something has been waiting centuries for this moment of convergence.
Historical Fantasy
Kindle - Paperback → English: https://mybook.to/CartographerDaughter
These three novels form a loose constellation around a single urgent question: how do freedom and democracy survive — or fail to survive — the people entrusted to protect them? Set in Nicaragua, a fictional Caribbean island nation, and Colombia across six decades, they move between intimate family drama and sweeping political history. Together they make the case that fiction can do something political analysis cannot: show us what it feels like from the inside when the unthinkable becomes normal.
In 1979, Daniel Ortega stood on a balcony in Managua promising democracy and justice to a nation finally free from dictatorship. Forty-six years later, that same palace is the center of a regime that eliminates opponents, silences critics, and rules through fear — all in the name of protecting the revolution. Told through the eyes of an American teacher who witnessed Nicaragua's transformation firsthand, this gripping historical novel traces Ortega's journey from idealistic guerrilla fighter to authoritarian ruler: the literacy campaigns and land reform that gave way to surveillance networks; the sixteen years in opposition learning to make deals with former enemies; the constitutional manipulation and family dynasty; and the systematic elimination of anyone who still remembers what the revolution was supposed to achieve. A devastating portrait of how liberators become oppressors — and how quickly the language of liberation becomes the vocabulary of repression.
"In our era of democratic backsliding worldwide, this novel serves as both warning and witness."
Kindle · Paperback · Audiobook →
When democracy dies, it doesn't always fall with a crash. Sometimes it drowns — slowly, quietly, one policy at a time. On the Caribbean island nation of Puerto Libertad, constitutional scholar Sofía Domínguez watches in disbelief as a populist leader rises to power despite losing the popular vote. What begins as political theater soon becomes something far darker: mass deportations, detention centers, journalists silenced, universities purged, citizens reclassified as "non-persons." As Sofía's own brother disappears into the regime's machinery, she must choose between the safety of academic neutrality and joining a dangerous resistance network of doctors, journalists, priests, and military officers who refuse to let democracy die without a fight. Written by a scholar of migration and society, this political thriller includes an analytical epilogue examining democratic backsliding in contemporary societies.
"Some things, once lost, can be found again. But only through courage, sacrifice, and the stubborn insistence that human dignity cannot be registered away." English · Includes analytical epilogue
A family saga that is also the story of Colombia itself — and a novel that dares to argue that reconciliation is possible.
En 1964 nacen Carlos y Nicolás Mendoza, hermanos mellizos en una familia bogotana de clase media. Siete minutos los separan al nacer — décadas de diferencias ideológicas los alejarán hasta convertirlos en extraños. Carlos se convierte en exitoso empresario del mundo del polo y los seguros, navegando las élites bogotanas con pragmatismo. Nicolás abraza la causa guerrillera del M-19, evoluciona hacia la política democrática, y termina conquistando la presidencia de Colombia después de décadas de lucha por la justicia social. A través de seis décadas de historia colombiana — desde la violencia de los años 70 hasta el proceso de paz del siglo XXI — los hermanos se protegen mutuamente en secreto, construyen familias en mundos opuestos, y aprenden que el amor fraternal puede sobrevivir cualquier diferencia ideológica. Cuando su madre muere a los 86 años, una última conversación cambia todo.
Spanish · Saga familiar · Seis décadas de historia colombiana
Kindle - Paperback →
Spanish: https://mybook.to/HermanosDeSangre
Not every story begins in Colombia or medieval Spain. These two novels follow communities shaped by forces larger than any individual life — the industrial diaspora that scattered my wife's cornish mining ancestors to the U.S., and a Polynesian lineage carrying sacred knowledge through 170 years of colonial transformation. Different oceans, different centuries, different cultures. The same questions: what do we carry when the world that formed us changes beyond recognition, and what do we pass on?
Tahiti, 1850. A gift that passes through five generations of women. A hundred and seventy years of colonial history, nuclear testing, and digital transformation — witnessed by those who can feel the mana moving through everything.
When fifteen-year-old Vairaumati dives for pearls in waters her ancestors have known for generations, a sacred pearl chooses her — and with it, the ability to see the mana, the current of life-force flowing through all living things, as threads of light weaving through water, objects, and people. It is a gift that will pass through her bloodline for five generations, evolving with each daughter born into a changing world.
Spanning 170 years of Polynesian history, this sweeping saga follows the women of the Maeva line through the fall of the Tahitian monarchy, two World Wars, French nuclear testing in the Pacific, and the digital revolution that reaches even the most remote islands. From pearl diving in pristine lagoons to decoding satellite signals, from colonial resistance to cultural preservation in the internet age, it is a story about what we inherit, what we protect, and what we pass on.
Paperback / Kindle
Spanish: https://mybook.to/HijasDeCorrienteSagrad
When the last tin mine in Cornwall closes, three brothers take different ships to different continents — one to the copper ranges of Upper Michigan, one to the gold fields of California, one to the silver mines of Guanajuato, Mexico. They carry with them the same skills, the same hymns, and the same unspoken question: what does it mean to be Cornish when Cornwall can no longer hold you?
Told across two generations and three countries, The Cousin Jacks follows what the diaspora built — communities tight enough to survive any mine disaster, clannish enough to make outsiders of their own children — and what it cost. The men who left Cornwall never stopped being Cornish. Their sons, born in Michigan or California or Mexico, never quite became anything else. The Cousin Jacks is a novel about the inheritance of identity across distance, and what gets lost in the crossing.
Kindle, Paperback & Audiobook -
English: https://mybook.to/CousinJacks
Standalone novels that resist easy categorization — rooted in specific histories and geographies, yet concerned with questions that cut across time and place: who owns knowledge, what survives migration, how technology reshapes what it means to belong. Fiction for readers who want both a compelling story and something to think about afterward.
Stories of Knowledge and Belonging
What do we owe the knowledge that shaped us? And what happens when sharing it means risking its destruction?
In six interlocking stories spanning four decades and three continents, Common Ground follows masters of rare disciplines — an art conservator who sees hidden layers in colonial paintings, a cartographer learning to map what instruments cannot measure, a chef carrying three traditions of fire in his scarred hands — as they confront the impossible ethics of knowledge that survives only by staying hidden.
A documentary filmmaker deletes eleven minutes of sacred footage while a tribal council watches. A meteorologist discovers the atmosphere preserves chemical signatures of mass graves.
Moving from a Danish smokehouse to Hong Kong street kitchens, from Bogotá's violence to Alaska's traditional healing rooms, from the stone gardens of Kyoto to the salmon rivers of the Pacific Northwest.
Paperback
English: https://mybook.to/CommonGround
A Century of Information and Communication Technologies
In 1878, a domestic worker touched a telephone for the first time and felt the world fold. In 2025, her great-great-granddaughter decided to turn off her smartphone and walk home the long way. Between these two moments: 150 years of technology that transformed everything. Ecos de Conexión follows three families across six generations and three continents — the Johnsons in the US, the Garcías in Colombia, the Diops in Senegal — through every major technological revolution of the last 150 years.
From the telegraph to ChatGPT. From switchboard operators to content moderators. From clandestine radio to deepfakes.
This novel asks: who controls information? What do we lose when we gain speed? When do tools start using us?
Paperback - Audiobook
English: https://mybook.to/EchoesOfConnection
Spanish: https://mybook.to/EcosConexion
What do you tell a five-year-old who wakes up to an empty Christmas tree? Blame the immigrants, obviously.
Little Charlie Peterson just wanted a LEGO Millennium Falcon. Instead, he got a front-row seat to his family's holiday celebration of tariffs, boat sinkings, and the glorious renaming of the Washington Monument. As relatives arrive bearing casseroles and conspiracy theories, Charlie watches the adults in his life deliver tearful testimonials to their favorite president and explain why the Supreme Court ruling that presidents can't be prosecuted is actually good news for everyone.
He can't figure out why gas costs seven dollars when his dad's shirt says "Mean Tweets, Low Prices." He doesn't understand why his favorite teacher isn't at school anymore. But he understands, with the brutal clarity only a child possesses, that the grown-ups are acting very, very strange.
A savage, heartfelt satire in the tradition of holiday fables from Dickens to Dr. Seuss. Sometimes the emperor has no clothes. Sometimes the Christmas tree has no presents. And sometimes the most dangerous question is the one a kindergartner asks at dinner: But why?
English · Paperback https://mybook.to/MAGAchristmas
© Ricardo Gómez · ricardogomez.net [Books] [About] [Amazon Author Page] [Substack: substack.com/@storiesacrossborders100]
"Stories that cross borders, centuries, and ways of knowing."