It's finally out! Narcisse's adventures in mortal-immortal coexistence and all the annoying drama that comes with the territory is available. Seriously, it felt like a dog's age, waiting for this day to come since I resisted the temptation to release the book a month or even two months earlier. But discipline is golden, and I'm doing my best to stick to my plans, whether or not the lure of calendar adjustments is good.
At any rate...
This book takes place concurrently with Nightshade's Emporium, and while it's not necessary, it does help to have read that book in order to get some of the references made to Viktor's own personal drama as the god of death.
And here's the blurb for The Perfect Rochester:
Being a primordial god has its perks unless one considers maturation, and centuries spent largely isolated from humanity begin to bear awkward fruit. Narcisse Nightshade, primordial god of sleep, is about to discover just how clumsy his coming-of-age at twenty immortal years can be. Prone to collapsing in defensive sleep and finding comfort in his specifically woven dreamscapes, he's used to enjoying his solitude his own way whenever the ills of the mortal world threaten his waking hours.
Until one night a stranger suddenly appears in his dream—a windswept, raging, Victorian dreamboat who instantly catapults Narcisse into a highly irregular adventure playing detective. How on earth did this invader manage to enter a private dream? What did he want from the god of sleep?
Narcisse fumbles through his own coming-of-age with the help of immortal messengers, a soulless older sister bent on exacting bloody justice, a hovering mother widely feared by their feuding kin, and Chaos itself. What he discovers about this elusive mortal opens the floodgates to his own inner world and his heart, and perhaps—perhaps—the god of sleep is a great deal more human where it counts the most.
Taking place concurrently as the events in Nightshade's Emporium, The Perfect Rochester is a romantic comedy about dreams, elusive and otherwise.
The book has its own Book Gallery page over yonder, and you're more than welcome to dig in there and read up on a few behind-the-scenes tidbits (plus extra music videos). The Perfect Rochester is available in e-book format for 99 cents and print for $9.00.
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