The True Story Behind “In the Ashes”: My Grandfather’s WWII Service and the Book It InspiredZac Northup2026-07-15T13:59:51+00:00
Inspired by Actual Events – A New Novel Coming July 31, 2026
As the German Reich collapses in fire and chaos, a squad of exhausted American infantrymen clears what remains of a Nazi concentration camp. What should be a final, grim duty turns into something far worse when they accidentally kill a Jewish prisoner.
With his last breath, the man begs them to save his wife, Elise, before the SS executes her in a nearby subcamp.
Most of the men want nothing to do with it. The war is nearly over. They’ve seen enough death. But one soldier cannot turn away—and his decision will drag the entire squad into an unauthorized race across a dying nation.
In the wreckage of a broken Reich, they must navigate a chaotic world filled with desperation and danger. Along the way they will discover how much humanity can still be salvaged… and how much it can cost.
Inspired by true accounts, In the Ashes is a gripping, unflinching novel of loyalty, guilt, and the final brutal choices of war.


Written to be enjoyed in a single evening.
















The Story: While clearing buildings in a newly liberated subcamp of Flossenbürg, Eddie’s squad engages a group of SS guards in one of the camp’s administrative outbuildings. In the chaos of the firefight, they accidentally kill several prisoners — including David Levy, a Lagerschreiber (camp clerk). As Levy lies dying from wounds, he begs them to find his wife, Elise, who was taken to the nearby women’s subcamp at Zwodau.
Rising Action & Stakes: Over the course of a single, brutal day, Eddie and his squad venture deeper into the collapsing, partially liberated camp in search of Elise. They face fanatical SS holdouts, desperate and starving prisoners, and the horrific evidence of what was done in the final hours of the war. As the day wears on, the men are forced to confront not only external dangers but also the growing realization that they may have already become the kind of men they once feared. Finding Elise becomes more than a rescue mission — it becomes a desperate attempt to reclaim some part of their humanity before the war ends and they are forced to return home as changed men.
A small group of battle-hardened American infantrymen — serves as the collective ensemble protagonist of the story.
At the center of the group is Private Eddie Hoskins, 31, a quiet, tobacco-chewing rifleman from rural West Virginia. He is often called “Hop” by the others. Like so many who have endured months of brutal combat, Eddie has been deeply changed by the war. He is a steady, reliable soldier who looks out for his friends, but he no longer recognizes the man he has become and has lost hope that he can ever return to the person he was before the war. His only remaining desire is to survive long enough to make it home to his wife and newborn daughter.
Alongside Eddie are the other members of the squad — ordinary men worn down by sustained combat since Normandy. Each carries his own exhaustion, anger, fears, and fractured sense of morality. As they move through the horrors of the concentration camp and become entangled in the search for Elise, the squad functions as a single, conflicted organism — their individual personalities, disagreements, small acts of humanity, and moments of moral compromise driving the story forward together.