My third novel, The Sins of Angels, is now available for preorder from PS Publishing. It’s a noirish paranormal thriller set in Cairo and the Western Desert, about a couple of hapless detectives who stumble upon a fallen angel. At this point, it’s available in a limited edition of one hundred signed hardbacks, and as an unsigned hardback. You can read the first chapter on my website.
The publisher asked me to write something about the
genesis of the book, and I’m including that below.
In 1999, after three years in southern Sudan, my wife and
I moved to Egypt. Soon after we arrived, I picked up E. M. Forster’s Alexandria: A History and a Guide, which
has been called the best guidebook ever written. It deftly melds the mythology
and history of the city with modern-day landmarks. In the opening pages,
Forster gives a brief synopsis of the Gnostic cosmogony, discussing the
demiurge and Sophia, the last of the fallen angels. Reading his overview, I had
a vision of a fallen angel on a Cairo sidewalk, and knew I would write her
story one day.
Seven years later, the notion of a literary and detective
agent came to me, and dovetailed with the earlier vision of the fallen angel.
In the meantime, I’d discovered the Nag Hammadi texts and had delved deeper
into Gnosticism, and realized I could fruitfully bring that knowledge to bear
on the tale of Sophia and my blundering detective, George Zacharias. The book
was started in Beni Suef in Upper Egypt, completed in Madison, Wisconsin, and
polished in Ventura, California.
One of the great pleasures I had while working on this
book was the discovery of Gustav Davidson’s A
Dictionary of Angels: Including the Fallen Angels, an immensely rich and
comprehensively researched text. I knew little about angels and their
hierarchies when I started out, and Davidson’s book provided the background I
needed to create a solid structure. I’ll leave off with the following passage
from Davidson’s alluring introduction:
“Without committing myself religiously I could conceive
of the possibility of there being, in dimensions and worlds other than our own,
powers and intelligences outside our present apprehension, and in this sense
angels are not to be ruled out as a part of reality—always remembering that we
create what we believe. Indeed, I am prepared to say that if enough of us
believe in angels, then angels exist...”