Timelessness tells the story of Psyche, the Greek goddess of the soul and her journey through the Norse Underworld.
Beware reader, in this realm nothing is as it seems and although the soul is eternal, Eternity is not.
Author's note - Wyrd Gods
The original manuscript of Wyrd Gods was over 350k words long. When I decided to self-publish, I figured it would be better to turn it into a trilogy (or a tetralogy and a novella as it turned out) which meant I had to break up a storyline that was already fragmented by design. The result is a strange and complex book with the added disadvantages of being a debut novel and the first book in a series.
If there's one thing I ask from my readers, it's patience. Think of Wyrd Gods as a Part I of a much longer story, and trust that there is a method to this tale of madness. Everything will eventually make sense in the end.
Author's note - Anachrony
When I first wrote Timelessness, a mid-series novella was not part of the plan.
The events described in Anachrony were originally written as interludes of Nephilim’s Hex (Timelessness Book 3), but as I was revising the book, I realised they kept breaking away from the narrative and shifting the focus from the main plot points in the story. I then tried to include these events in Anamnesis (Timelessness Book 4), but the same problem occurred, so I rewrote and expanded the story until it became a sort of interlude for the series. (Timelessness 3.5)
Anachrony relies heavily on the events from the previous books, and it shouldn’t be read on its own. However, the audiobook is available for free on my Youtube channel, Den of the Wyrd. If you don't mind a few spoilers, check it out. It might help you make sense of some of the most bizarre events in the series.
Author's note - Oublié
Oublié was originally written as a sequel to Wyrd Gods (back when Wyrd Gods covered the events of what is now the Timelessness series).
Turning a sequel into a standalone novel was not an easy feat. I spent most of 2023 working through the mother of all revisions, trying to untangle and simplify plot lines so that the bulk of the narrative made sense while still leaving enough connections to the main series in order to (hopefully) trigger the reader’s curiosity about the previous books.
Time, and I guess you, the reader, will tell if I’ve succeeded or not.
Personally, I am happy with the result. Oublié is now a much better book than it was when I first wrote it and it has become a lot more than just a sequel.
Think of it as a monochromatic Bifröst between series.
Thank you for reading.
Beware reader, in this realm nothing is as it seems and although the soul is eternal, Eternity is not.
Author's note - Wyrd Gods
The original manuscript of Wyrd Gods was over 350k words long. When I decided to self-publish, I figured it would be better to turn it into a trilogy (or a tetralogy and a novella as it turned out) which meant I had to break up a storyline that was already fragmented by design. The result is a strange and complex book with the added disadvantages of being a debut novel and the first book in a series.
If there's one thing I ask from my readers, it's patience. Think of Wyrd Gods as a Part I of a much longer story, and trust that there is a method to this tale of madness. Everything will eventually make sense in the end.
Author's note - Anachrony
When I first wrote Timelessness, a mid-series novella was not part of the plan.
The events described in Anachrony were originally written as interludes of Nephilim’s Hex (Timelessness Book 3), but as I was revising the book, I realised they kept breaking away from the narrative and shifting the focus from the main plot points in the story. I then tried to include these events in Anamnesis (Timelessness Book 4), but the same problem occurred, so I rewrote and expanded the story until it became a sort of interlude for the series. (Timelessness 3.5)
Anachrony relies heavily on the events from the previous books, and it shouldn’t be read on its own. However, the audiobook is available for free on my Youtube channel, Den of the Wyrd. If you don't mind a few spoilers, check it out. It might help you make sense of some of the most bizarre events in the series.
Author's note - Oublié
Oublié was originally written as a sequel to Wyrd Gods (back when Wyrd Gods covered the events of what is now the Timelessness series).
Turning a sequel into a standalone novel was not an easy feat. I spent most of 2023 working through the mother of all revisions, trying to untangle and simplify plot lines so that the bulk of the narrative made sense while still leaving enough connections to the main series in order to (hopefully) trigger the reader’s curiosity about the previous books.
Time, and I guess you, the reader, will tell if I’ve succeeded or not.
Personally, I am happy with the result. Oublié is now a much better book than it was when I first wrote it and it has become a lot more than just a sequel.
Think of it as a monochromatic Bifröst between series.
Thank you for reading.