
Heiß wie der Steppenwind
In a whirlwind of passion, danger, and the distant expanses of the steppes, the heroes face a love that changes fate, but also temptations that demand courage, loyalty, and sacrifice.
Heiß wie der Steppenwind is a novel by Heinz G. Konsalik set in the harsh world of Siberia, where a love story develops under the pressure of a repressive system and constant danger. The main character is the surgeon Igor Pjetkin, a doctor working in a large Siberian penal camp. In this cold and hopeless environment, he meets Doctor Dunja, a woman of strong will and warmth, and love is born between them at first sight. Their relationship, however, is doomed to be tested from the beginning, because private feelings in such a system are not only a personal matter but also a political problem.
Additional tension is also brought in by Natalija, also a doctor, who is in love with Igor and cannot reconcile himself with his attachment to Dunja. The love triangle thus turns into a story of jealousy, loyalty and the struggle for personal happiness in circumstances that stifle freedom of choice. At the same time, everyday life in the camp is filled with the suffering of prisoners, medical responsibility and constant surveillance by the authorities, so Igor and Dunja must defend their relationship from both external pressures and internal doubts.
The novel combines a melodramatic love story with an exotic-cruel setting and motifs of captivity, sacrifice and moral endurance. The central question is not only whether love will survive, but also how much a person can preserve dignity, feelings and hope where fear and control reign. That is why the novel works both as a love drama and as a story of survival in inhumane circumstances.
One copy is available





