The Gospel of Knives is not a retelling of Julius Caesar.
It is a ritual confession.
A poetic field report carved from the bones of betrayal, hunger, power, and fire.
Written with raw appetite and lyrical fire, this book reimagines Shakespeare's play not as history, but as myth - a fevered, psychological gospel where every character is a voice inside one fractured self.
Twelve long-form poetic prose chapters - gospels - unravel the animal beneath the empire:
Caesar as appetite made flesh.
Brutus as moral purity hiding a blade.
Cassius as the mirror that speaks too clearly.
Antony as seduction weaponized.
Rome as a mouth that devours what it loves.
And you - the reader - as both witness and accomplice.
This is not academic commentary.
It is scripture in smoke.
A confession booth set on fire.
A gospel written in the voice of knives, ghosts, and ash.
If you've ever tasted power,
If you've ever loved a myth,
If you've ever watched something sacred collapse and wondered if you helped -
this book is for you.
Come hungry.
Come holy.
Come sharp.