Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Bitterly long their imprisoned spirits lay, fast bound to Earth's drowsy decay. To the Simbolinian race, there was no hell on Earth, for Earth was hell, and Usen the cosmic jailor. Was it any wonder that when Usen's children came forth, as vampires they stalked his children for blood? Most chose the Kingdom of Night, one precarious step from the Kingdom of Darkness-from the diaboloi-but there were vampires of the light.As queen of the night, Lilith's story streams through the sands of Sumer, and through the green woods of Sherwood. It flags up both dishonour and joy, and cuts across the paths of Ulrica the Saxon and Robin the Hood, as tyrannies rise and fall in merry England. Bigotry seldom has a good word to say about Usen, nor about mercy. Reluctantly, Lilith re-examines what it means to show mercy, to show weakness. Wulfgar had enslaved Ulrica: is it mercy to let her die; should mercy have spared Lona? Could Hamashiach turn daughter into sister? Could Count Draco be turned from his madness? Has Draven really betrayed his mother? Life has many questions?Tales tell of ideas, pictures, letting us walk through the eyes of others to better see ourselves. This story exposes subplots behind secular history. How these chronicles came to be written up is, in the spirit confidentiality, not for the public eye. What truth is within you must judge. Discrimination is a gift from Beyond, from which the words still echo: mercy is better than sacrifice. Indeed mercy can be sacrifice. Judge well.