Beck Devlin is a demon-hunter in Post-Judgement Day London. It turns out that everybody and nobody was right about the Apocalypse. Both angels and demons of all varieties have thrown out the rulebook.
What Beck doesn’t know is that she used to be an angel – an angel who fell in love with a demon.
Now someone is hunting Fallen Angels in London. Beck has to find out who she really is and find the killer…before the killer finds her.
Is it not true that in this age of sophisticated technical apparatuses
we still frequently turn to the Middle Ages in search of our images and secrets?
- Luce Irigaray
The Myth of Morgan la Fey is a comprehensive study of the evolution of the famed sorceress over the past millennium. A close examination of the changing portrayal of Morgan la Fey throughout history in different cultural contexts affords the reader new insight into fundamental gender dynamics that still inform the individual’s construction of Self in the Internet age. Morgan has captured the vivid imaginations of writers and artists from Geoffrey of Monmouth to Marvel Comics, and this investigation attempts to explain why.
I was feeling a little lonely for my hometown today so I decided to pay homage. My forthcoming novel, Like the Night, also just happens to feature a Revenant who takes a bite out of The Big Apple on a regular basis!
Kristina Pérez is a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Journalism and Media Studies Centre at the University of Hong Kong. She is also the author of A Hedonist’s Guide to Beijing and writes regularly for the Wall Street Journal Asia, American Express, CNNGo.com, and Condé Nast Traveler. Kristina received her PhD from the University of Cambridge. Her first fiction and non-fiction titles are forthcoming. When not writing, she can be found singing in the Kassia Choir of Hong Kong.