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What if the villain already ruled, the prophet sat in prison, and the only surviving testimony was written in exile?
Devil's Destiny - The Babylonian Requiem is a reverse hero's journey told through the eyes of both prophet and villain. It draws on the cadence of historical records, the intimacy of street-level testimony, and the mythic tones of scripture. The novel follows Forty Black, a Harlem-born exile wrongfully imprisoned after political rumors ignite in Berlin. From prison silence, he dictates a "Gospel of Exile," promising reparations and resurrection not as miracles but as historical necessity. In parallel, the shadowy Skags Alfa Beta seizes The Letter-an ancient document said to control not only law but its interpretation-using it to consolidate power.
Taken together, the Devil's Destiny trilogy constructs an arc of political theology for the twenty-first century. It draws on the lineage of Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, and Colson Whitehead, while also conversing with global archives-slave narratives, Cold War intelligence reports, startup manifestos, and underground testimony. Its style moves from the intimacy of dialogue to the authority of historical record, from the feel of prison walls to the cadence of textbooks.
The trilogy's greatest ambition is to insist that archives matter. History is not neutral, and memory is not incidental. To control a people, empires seize their record; to repair a people, witnesses must reclaim it. Devil's Destiny is thus both novel and counter-archive: a work of fiction that imagines how testimony itself can become the seed of prophecy, and how prophecy, even in silence, can unsettle the permanence of empires.
The blend of prophecy, systemic critique, and personal tragedy is ambitious and intriguing. The idea of Silence as a weapon and The Letter as a tool of power is fascinating. The prose is gorgeous.
-Canopy C.
A haunting, atmospheric stage for a story that's both realistic and mythic. The book is extremely new and original, combining noir, historical, and mythological themes in a way that eschews the cliché. The concept of a time-warped, shape-shifting spy tracking down a document that can "crown the next tyranny" is a novel one and surprising.
-Ben T.
I was hooked. It feels like reading something between a spy thriller and a gothic fantasy. Your prose is lush and deliberate, with a rhythm that feels almost musical. A great balance between descriptive prose with flourishes and concise action, keeping the pacing tight despite the rich imagery. Creates a visceral reading experience. The prose feels polished but not
overwritten, which is a tough balance to nail.
-Huzzain