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"What the Dead Remember is a hauntingly lyrical epic that fuses necromancy, love, and rebellion into a dark fantasy where memory becomes a battleground, the dead refuse to forget, and redemption may rise from the ruins of war."
- NewInBooks
What the Dead Remember
by Alex Shternshain
When the living fall, the dead remember.
On a battlefield drowned in smoke and blood, a soldier named Dilvish breathes his last - only to awaken beneath the cold gaze of the Bonesmith, a necromancer whose art twists the fallen into instruments of his will. But something in Dilvish refuses to yield. Within the shell of an undead servant flickers a spark of memory, of loyalty, of love. And that spark, in a world where death itself has a master, may be the beginning of a revolution.
In the kingdom of Armath, death has become a weapon. Armies of corpses march beneath the Bonesmith's banners, and every grave is a potential conscript. As cities fall and loyalties rot, Naaya, a young woman who once dreamed of peace, discovers her own forbidden gift - the power to command what should never rise. When fate binds her path to Dilvish's, the two must decide what it means to be human in a world where even the soul can be enslaved.
Meanwhile, across the war-torn plains, the proud Queen Amarelle fights to preserve her crumbling realm, torn between crown and conscience. Her son, the Prince, wages war not only against the Bonesmith's armies but against the shadows in his own heart. And from behind the lines, Lady Tress, the Bonesmith's most brilliant lieutenant, begins to wonder whether her master's empire of death might also devour her.
As armies converge upon the ruined city of Velstoy, prophecy, vengeance, and forbidden magic entwine. The line between life and death blurs. Old love becomes a weapon. And when the last spell is cast, the world will learn that memory itself can kill - or save.
What the Dead Remember is a dark, lyrical epic of necromancy, love, and rebellion - a story of the quiet strength of conscience in the face of corruption. It asks what remains when the flesh fails, and whether redemption can bloom from ruin.
Through haunted battlefields and crumbling cities, through whispered prayers and unholy miracles, Alex Shternshain weaves a world where the dead walk not as monsters, but as mirrors. Every ghost recalls a promise. Every resurrection exacts a price.
And in the end, even death must take sides.
Themes & Tone
A grim yet human fantasy in the spirit of The Poppy War, The First Law, and Gideon the Ninth, What the Dead Remember blends the intimacy of tragedy with the sweep of epic war.
It is not a story of chosen heroes or righteous quests - it is a story of endurance, of people holding onto meaning when the gods and kings have abandoned theirs.
Beneath the grandeur of magic and the clash of nations lies something quieter:
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The ache of memory.
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The weight of love that survives death.
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The question of whether peace is worth the cost of forgetting.
About the Author
Alex Shternshain writes speculative fiction about memory, mortality, and the thin boundaries between the sacred and the profane. Drawing from myth, philosophy, and modern warfare, his work explores how power changes what we believe about right and wrong - and whether even the damned deserve a second chance.
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