When it’s written in entrails, you know that the future will be bloody.



The Gray Women warn that the wolf-clans are on the move again. The message in the entrails is clear: “Hunger comes on four legs and on two”, foretelling the return of the lycanthropes.

As a savage winter descends, the Gray Women despatch their young servant girl as envoy to Nimmersdorf Castle. She must face a treacherous journey if she is to save the people of these lands from certain, violent destruction.

Inviscera is a compelling reminder that – if you go back far enough – all the old fairy stories were nasty. It’s a vivid, visceral dark fantasy with full complement of omens, armies, werewolves, princes, daggers, terrible secrets and – of course – plenty of blood; a richly textured gothic romance that oozes style and atmosphere; a beautifully narrated parable about the onset of womanhood, about the loss of innocence and the wages of desire.



Appox. 42 pages