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OverviewHe Still Stands is a dark, introspective fantasy about faith in decay, the cost of moral certainty, and the quiet harm done in the name of doing what's right. Daelon Caelux was not born, he was written into being as a living hymn to a forgotten god. An ethereal wrapped in sacred verse, he has devoted his existence to preserving the crumbling ideals of mercy, sacrifice, and justice in a city that has long since traded reverence for spectacle. Rarek still celebrates holy days, still wears the symbols of old faith, but only as fashion. The gods are props. Virtue is performative. And belief has become something to monetize. When Daelon meets Luna, a strange fae child marked by painful runic bindings and haunted by a past she cannot voice, he sees in her a reflection of his own isolation. She is alone. So is he. Convinced it is his duty to protect her, he inserts himself into her life with relentless moral certainty, never realizing that his help may be another form of harm. Luna does not need a savior. She needs space to heal. And Daelon, blinded by rigid ideals of right and wrong, cannot see the difference. As civil unrest simmers in Rarek, a charismatic young preacher named Aurelian Vale rises to prominence. Vale speaks of faith, but without sacrifice. He offers the masses something easier than conviction: a version of morality shaped not by principle, but by effectiveness. His influence spreads quickly, reshaping public belief into something malleable, profitable, and dangerously compelling. Where Daelon clings to absolutes, Vale thrives in ambiguity. While Daelon searches desperately for answers about his creator, his sisters must confront the fractures within their faith without him. His sister Eryndra enforces divine law through fear. His sister Kirtana tries to win hearts through beauty. And Daelon stands between them, believing there is only one true path forward... even as the world proves otherwise. Told in first person with lyrical prose and emotional weight, He Still Stands explores neurodivergent morality, found family, and the tension between tradition and cultural evolution. It is a story about chosen purpose in a world that no longer believes in choosing anything but itself. When justice becomes a performance and faith becomes a brand, what does it mean to stand firm? And when standing firm begins to hurt the ones you love... how do you learn to bend? Full Product DetailsAuthor: Samantha Zaboski , Elin Tan , Karl Arthur SminkPublisher: Karl Arthur Smink Imprint: Karl Arthur Smink Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.281kg ISBN: 9798991433068Pages: 204 Publication Date: 02 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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