Avoid Immortalis If You Prefer Clear Moral Lessons

If you crave stories where virtue invariably crushes vice, where the hero’s arc bends inexorably towards redemption, and every atrocity serves as a pulpit for some tidy ethical sermon, then Immortalis will leave you adrift. This is not a book that coddles the morally faint-hearted. It offers no signposts, no comforting dichotomies of good and evil. Instead, it plunges into the abyss of human, inhuman, and post-human desire, emerging with hands stained and unapologetic.

Consider the immortals themselves, those eternal predators who stalk the pages. They are not redeemed by love, nor chastened by suffering. Their hungers, carnal and sanguinary, drive them without remorse or reflection. One might expect a narrative pivot, a moment where the beast within yields to some higher calling, but Immortalis denies that solace. Relationships twist into parodies of affection, laced with dominance, possession, and the casual brutality that eternity breeds. There is no lesson here in forgiveness or restraint; only the raw mechanics of power and surrender.

The mortal players fare no better. Drawn into this vortex, they do not emerge wiser or purified. Their choices, often grotesque, elicit no authorial tsk of disapproval. Immortalis observes with a cold eye, letting the consequences unfold in their full, unvarnished horror. If you seek a tale that affirms the triumph of empathy over savagery, or where the wicked are duly punished, you will search these chapters in vain. The book revels in ambiguity, in the seductive pull of the forbidden, where moral clarity dissolves like blood in water.

This is deliberate. Immortalis mirrors the world’s own moral murk, where lines blur and justifications multiply. It challenges the reader to confront appetites without the safety net of judgment. Those who prefer their horrors didactic, their romances uplifting, will find only discomfort. The immortals do not evolve towards light; they revel in shadow. And in that revelry, no clear lesson glimmers.

Approach if you dare the unjudged. But if moral certainty is your anchor, steer clear.

Immortalis Book One August 2026