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OverviewIn the shell-city of Eterra, reality has been buried under white stone, sealed doctrine, and a lie repeated so long it became architecture. Far above, the upper precincts gleam beneath a curated heaven of marble, gardens, and false stars. Far below, the lower world chokes on rust, hunger, smoke, and fear. Between them stands a civilization that has survived by calling control salvation, purity virtue, and obedience peace. But beneath the city, something older still is waiting. Long before the Inquisition had white halls, sealed ledgers, and the holy name of the Order of the White Fire, it had only terror: a buried force rising from the deep places of the world, radiant with beauty, memory, and annihilating power. One woman stood before that light and smiled while it burned through her. Vaelis saw that smile, and in that moment something in him broke. He would spend the rest of his life turning grief into doctrine. Now Vaelis commands the white-cloaked hunters of the Order, descending into the rusting underbands with ash-gray masks, cold-fire rods, and the absolute conviction that mercy must sometimes wear the face of cruelty. Their creed is merciless and beautiful: beauty is contamination. Wonder is treason. Any soul that listens too closely to what sleeps beneath the city must be purified before it can smile again. Yet in the lower quarters, behind a false wall in a hidden workshop, another inheritance survives. A father hides the old law for his daughter and remembers what the world above has forgotten: shelter was never meant to become religion. Silence was never meant to become worship. But in Eterra every wall has become sacred, every quarantine permanent, every tool of survival sharpened into a weapon against the human soul. When the white signal sounds through the corridors and quarantine strips are nailed across the arches, the room itself must choose who lives, who is taken, and who becomes dust. What remains is small, fragile, and impossibly dangerous: an ancient tuning fork waiting in the dark, a dead woman's voice preserved in a memory leaf, a child forced to master perfect silence, and a hidden current of truth running beneath the city's polished lies like a buried river that still remembers freedom. The Order of the White Fire is a gothic, philosophical, cinematic dark-fantasy epic about sanctified terror, buried memory, and grief remade into architecture. It is the story of a civilization that tried to protect itself and ended by building a cathedral around its own fear. It is the story of love turned heresy, mercy turned instrument, and guardians who became jailers while still believing they served the good. In Eterra, the House has already been made. The question is whether anything human can still live inside it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ralph ClaytonPublisher: Ralph Clayton Imprint: Ralph Clayton Volume: 2 Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.60cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.517kg ISBN: 9798233923647Pages: 452 Publication Date: 18 April 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 InformationRalph Clayton writes fiction about power after it stops being dramatic. His work focuses on systems that do not shout, violence that no longer needs to happen, and lives shaped less by choice than by timing, procedure, and quiet compliance. Across novels and interconnected series, Clayton examines how modern authority removes people politely-through optimization, maintenance, and waiting-rather than spectacle or force. His books blend dark satire, procedural horror, and existential noir, drawing on post-Soviet realism, institutional absurdity, and contemporary technological anxiety. Recurring themes include exile, erasure, delayed agency, and the slow normalization of the unbearable. Redemption is rare. Resolution is usually administrative. Clayton's writing is known for its restrained brutality, deadpan humor, and cold clarity. Violence, when it appears, is never heroic. Systems, when exposed, are never personal. Characters survive not by rebellion, but by adaptation-and sometimes by hesitation. He is the author of How to Be Nothing, The Children of Kings, How Hunger Is Measured, and Please Remain Seated: This Will Only Take a Moment, among others. His books are part of a shared narrative universe in which outcomes are fixed, explanations are optional, and continuity is always confirmed. Ralph Clayton lives quietly and writes regularly. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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