There’s something special about holding a book in your hands.
The texture of the cover. The quiet crackle of paper. Even the faint smell of ink and glue. It’s physical, tangible. Something you can touch, lend, shelve, and return to years later. Or give to others, share.
A book on a shelf.
Not on a screen. Not as a file or a thumbnail.
A book. With a spine, a cover, weight.
And now, the trilogy has that weight.
It took eight years, but the three stories – Blood and Rain (2017), Mont Noir (2023), and A Sky Without Stars (2025) – finally belong together. They’ve been redesigned with a unified look. Clean, consistent, and unmistakably part of the same world. For the first time, they look like what they are. Three parts of a whole.
Each stands on its own, but together they tell a single story. A story of war, love, personal loss and small victories, and the long shadow of history.
And now, you can hold them.
All three are available on Amazon in both paperback ($9.99) and hardcover ($18.99) editions, with two-day delivery in most regions.
These stories have been through many drafts, the earlier ones have new covers and the inside pages have been redesigned. Thinking up the characters, concepts, plotting the stories and writing them, designing the books in three different format… I have no idea how many late nights they caused. But they are here now.
Seeing them side by side at last, with a unified design and an affordable print option, feels like closing a long chapter.
You can find them all here: Amazon Author Page ›