Book cover designed by Veludo & Mentol

Ryo goes by his days living with his adoptive parents in the small town of Lemuris. Nearing the date of his eighteenth birthday he meets a new girl in town. Eventually, her openhearted personality overcomes Ryo’s defensive perspective on his surroundings and he discovers love, but it is short-lived.
A dark, unwelcome and unavoidable destiny hangs on Ryo’s shoulders; one which will change his own world as much as it will scar Humanity’s history forever.

A world of fantasy, where celestial beings battle fallen angels and Humanity is caught in the crossfire. A story of the real world, of the fears, the desires and the ambition that exist within each and every one of us, and of how far we can go, given the right push.

The barrier that separates right from wrong is shown not to be a thin line between black and white, as most mainstream religions paint it to be, but instead a black hole that sucks everything around it into a gray plane of uncertainty and unimaginably tough decisions.

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"Demon’s Blood destroyed the preconceived notions I had about books focused on angels and demons."

"A big plus, for me, was the multiplicity of main characters, which makes the read all the more dynamic. The story has rythm from beginning to end as the author alternates between the most diverse subplots, at times from more than one point of view, while keeping the chapters relatively short. The book is structured so that it never becomes boring and so that it’s always possible to take a break without ever losing the thread of the story."  -

Full review, by Maria Eduarda

"I loved how each deception and intrigue was revealed step by step, how the characters discovered they were used as mere tools, manipulated into doing things they deeply regret afterwards. I also relished the role reversal between demons and angels, finding good and bad guys on both - and unexpected - sides.

The last 100 pages or so were a real treat. Somehow a switch had been moved: reading was no longer a stuttering effort, but a smooth affair. Also, the at first abstruse complexity of the story suddenly made sense as all puzzle pieces fell into place."  -

Full review, by Elke