From the hot streets of Campden Park to siren-filled nights in the U.S., Ashes and Iron: A Life Forged in Fire narrates the tale of a boy who was shaped by poverty, brotherhood, grief, and literal flames; however, he chooses not just to survive, but to become what he was meant to…
This isn’t a polished “success story.” It’s a barefoot kid rolling his brother down a hill in a shipping barrel. It’s carnival streets, near-death moments under a truck, broken brotherhoods, 3 a.m. fire calls, and a father trying to stay present after seeing too much. It’s how ashes become iron—and how you can, too.
I saw my own childhood, my own father, and my own grief in these pages. This isn’t just a book—it’s a conversation men have been needing to have for a long time.
Raw, honest, and beautifully written. Nolan doesn’t try to make himself the hero. He just tells the truth—and that’s what makes this book powerful.
If you grew up in the Caribbean or in any tight-knit neighborhood, this book will feel like home and heartbreak all at once.
Ashes and Iron pushes back.
Nolan Peters is a husband, father, firefighter, and paramedic whose life spans the hot streets of Campden Park, St. Vincent, and the siren-filled nights of American cities.
Ashes and Iron: A Life Forged in Fire is his debut book—a raw, reflective memoir about becoming a man in the heat of real life, without losing the boy, the island, or the values that made him.