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novel

Posted on November 4, 2025

To Sleep with Demons: A Review of A Muse by Kieran Saint Leonard

Guest Post

by Patrick Zaia

In 1844, the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer penned a curious and somewhat controversial essay titled ‘The Metaphysics of Sexual Love’. With devilish and gloomily elegant prose, Schopenhauer’s essay articulates a theory of sexual love and desire that is negative, irrational, and perilously self-destructive to all those who experience it. In one of the essay’s more bombastic sections, Schopenhauer’ describes the sexual instinct thusly:

“Every day it brews and hatches the worst and most perplexing quarrels and disputes, destroys the most valuable relationships, and breaks the strongest bonds. It demands the sacrifice sometimes of life or health, sometimes of wealth, position, and happiness. Indeed, it robs of all conscience those who were previously loyal and faithful. Accordingly, it appears on the whole as a malevolent demon, striving to pervert, to confuse, and to overthrow everything.”

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Posted on August 29, 2025

Empty Empires: A Review of Alma Katsu’s Fiend

Guest Post

Kyle Brett

Despite its cultural ties and flashy prose, Alma Katsu’s forthcoming Fiend falls short. When I finished Fiend, I felt like I read a story filled with tissue paper dolls instead of characters. And like tissue paper, this cast of characters was only worth a single use.

For a while, I thought maybe that was the point. That there had to be a reason for such a stunning lack of depth and motivation. Is this a critique of the billionaire class — a book where blind ambition, generational trauma, and power vacuums collide to show readers that dynastic families like the Berishas are impossible to relate to? Is this Katsu at her most political? Or is this about horror being able to barely stand on its own next to the atrocities of capitalism’s corrupting reach?

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