Avoid Immortalis If You Prefer Clear Boundaries in Fiction

In the realm of fiction, certain works adhere to neat delineations: heroes triumph without compromise, villains meet their unambiguous ends, and the line between desire and depravity remains firmly drawn. Immortalis shatters such illusions with deliberate precision. If you seek stories that respect the sanctity of moral perimeters, or narratives where the erotic and the grotesque do not bleed into one another, turn away now.

The novel plunges readers into a world where immortality is no gift, but a curse etched in flesh and sinew. Characters navigate eternities marred by insatiable hungers, their pursuits defying conventional limits of consent, power, and survival. What begins as a seductive entanglement spirals into visceral horror, where boundaries of body and mind dissolve under relentless forces. Protagonists, trapped in cycles of dominance and submission, confront urges that fiction rarely dares to render so raw. The immortal’s longevity amplifies every transgression, rendering regret eternal, pleasure indistinguishable from agony.

Consider the central dynamics: alliances forged in blood, loyalties tested through exquisite cruelties, and intimacies that weaponise vulnerability. No scene arrives pre-packaged with safety nets; instead, the text compels confrontation with the abyss of human, and inhuman, potential. Readers accustomed to tidy resolutions will find none here. Immortalis thrives on ambiguity, on the thrill of the precipice where love curdles into obsession, and horror masquerades as ecstasy.

This is not a failing of craft, but its triumph. The prose, measured and unyielding, mirrors the inexorable pull of its world. Sentences build like tightening restraints, releasing only to ensnare anew. If clear boundaries comfort you, if you require fiction to remain safely contained, Immortalis will unsettle you profoundly. It invites no half-measures, demands full immersion, and leaves marks that linger.

Proceed at your peril.

Immortalis Book One August 2026