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Triunitae: Patefactum Origins
Posted by Literary Titan

Triunitae: Patefactum Origins opens with a cosmology rather than a mere premise: gods shape paradise, rebellion fractures heaven, love curdles into punishment, and the divine daughter Vis Ocula is shattered into three women hidden across a hellish kingdom. From there, the novel follows Our Luminous One, a fallen celestial presence thrust into a murdered Roman body and sent into Orbis Silentio to recover those fragments before the ruin of the worlds becomes permanent. I liked how unabashedly mythic the book is. It does not sidle into its own grandeur; it strides straight at it, carrying invented theology, infernal landscapes, and a protagonist whose quest feels half scripture, half nightmare march.
What I admired most was the book’s appetite for intensity. Author J. R. Izquierdo writes as though moderation were a lesser art, and in this case that refusal gives the novel its voltage. The prose is often barbed, ceremonial, and vividly tactile; it likes blood, ash, rot, radiance, and metal, and it uses them with a kind of stern relish. I found myself pulled along less by conventional suspense than by the sheer force of the worldbuilding and the cadence of the sentences. Even when the violence becomes grotesque, it rarely feels decorative. It feels like the book is trying to prove that cosmic betrayal should leave a visible wound.
I was also interested in the emotional architecture under all that ruin. For a novel so invested in punishment and spectacle, it keeps circling back to grief, loyalty, judgment, and the cost of divine absolutism. Our Luminous One is compelling to me because he is not softened into an easy hero; he moves through this world with severity, confusion, and flashes of buried instinct, which makes the journey feel harsher and more morally jagged than standard quest fantasy. The book’s style can feel almost operatic, and readers who prefer restraint may find it excessive. I didn’t mind the excess. The whole design of the novel depends on it. This is a book that wants to sound like a fallen hymn, and more often than not, it does.
I’d recommend this most to readers of dark fantasy, mythic fantasy, grim fantasy, and fantasy horror, especially people who enjoy invented cosmologies, infernal quest structures, and prose that is lush without turning gauzy. It reminded me, in different proportions, of Clive Barker’s appetite for the grotesque and the high-theological mood that readers often seek in epic dark fantasy. This is a savage and strange debut that would rather scar your imagination than politely entertain it.
Pages: 133 | ASIN : B0GRBS7PRC
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, dark fantasy, ebook, epic fantasy, fantasy, fiction, goodreads, horror, indie author, J. R. Izquierdo, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, Triunitae: Patefactum Origins, writer, writing
Involuntarius
Posted by Literary Titan

Involuntarius plunges into darkness, unraveling a tale of religious dominance, hidden truths, and brutal rituals. The story follows Ellis, a young man entangled in the sinister web of the Congregatio, a powerful religious order that dictates every aspect of society. Ellis, seeking answers, uncovers unsettling connections within his family, spiraling deeper into a nightmarish reality where nothing is as it seems.
Izquierdo’s writing is gripping. The prose, dense and vivid, pulls you into a world that feels alive yet eerily off-kilter. Early on, Ellis stumbles upon his mother’s lifeless body. The scene is stark and haunting. You feel the horror, the despair. This intensity doesn’t let up; it keeps you hooked. The rapid pace, combined with the heavy language, makes this book hard to put down. The Congregatio dominates, and its presence is tangible, almost like that of a character itself. Rigid hierarchies, secretive rituals, and absolute power—this is a world where blind faith is dangerous. The tension between control and rebellion pulses through the narrative. Sadie, an enigmatic figure, is both captivating and terrifying. Her relationship with Ellis and his father is a twisted dance of power, leaving you questioning who’s really in charge. The plot is filled with twists and tangles. Supernatural elements sneak in, voices whisper, and heat shimmers. There is a sense of something dark lurking beneath the surface that keeps you reading.
Involuntarius is a dark journey. Fans of gothic horror and psychological thrillers will find it compelling. Izquierdo crafts a world that’s as terrifying as it is fascinating. The characters are shadowed in mystery, their secrets pulling you deeper. It’s a story that will linger long after you’ve turned the last page.
Page: 343 | ASIN : B0D9ZZDJVB
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: Alternate History Science Fiction, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, Fantasy Action & Adventure, goodreads, Greek & Roman Myth & Legend, indie author, Involuntarius, J. R. Izquierdo, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, writer, writing






