At times, the narration takes the form of a hurried staccato-ed poem, as if mimicking the intensity and urgency of passionate sex. The text in Starblood is wordy and novelistic (appropriately so), poetically elaborate as it is fluid, like a pained poem in line with Edgar Allen Poe, and infused with a rampant and vividly described sexuality. Bent on destroying Satori’s life while threatening to steal the woman he loves, Satori must now step up to salvage his splintering life and cast the demon from whence it came. Foolishly, Satori summons the sultry temptress succubus Lilith and as expected things don’t quite go as planned for the desperately romantic Satori when Lilith lures Star into a passionate sexual affair. Starblood follows the lovelorn Satori, a thin and shirtless dark magician, blindly in love with Star, an equally stunning physical specimen. Part of the Starblood Trilogy, the first installment is now available (as of September 30) in paperback and Kindle through Amazon. This time around, her story about passionate love, magic, and demons will be liberated from the confinements of text, and will be accompanied by the ethereal and ghostly artwork of Belarus artist Anna Prashkovich. The award-winning novel Starblood, from Scottish horror author Carmilla Voiez, is making a glorious comeback.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |