When evil knows your mind, fight it with your heart.
Trapped for centuries inside mortal minds, a manipulative daeva with a grudge against humanity finally finds a host he can use to set himself free into the world. Sharon, the host's sister, works tirelessly to help her brother resist the daeva's influence, but by the time she fully understands the threat to mankind, she's become the key to the daeva's success. Her death will either empower the daeva or destroy him.
As a reader, I've always loved the added urgency and imagination a paranormal element adds to thrillers and suspense novels, so that's what I write. I also love well-developed characters, whether they're likable, despicable, tortured, or those in-between characters you can't decide whether to hate or love.
I've been writing novels since 1995 while living in a rural cabin in northeastern Vermont. I've moved around a lot since then. Now I live in Albuquerque, New Mexico. I have five published novels available on Amazon, and they slide between genres—psychological thriller, supernatural suspense, paranormal horror, and dark fantasy. My new release, The Sirens of Sayhurn, is a dark fantasy that reimagines the role of sirens, and I'm already planning a sequel.
Keith Pyeatt pulls off a really cool, eerie vibe with this one. It’s got that perfect mix of a grounded mystery and something much more unsettling lurking just out of sight. The way the tension builds feels totally natural—it doesn’t rely on cheap scares, but instead settles into this moody, psychological groove that’s hard to shake. It’s an immersive, well-paced read that’s great for a late night when you want a thriller with a bit of a dark, supernatural edge to it.
He has finally found the right host to do what he wants. He will use them to take his revenge of everything and everybody. Their sister is trying to help them but it soon becomes clear her death is the key to it all. She will either destroy him or free him. See if she can save her brother I received an advance copy from hidden gems and a interesting read