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Five years ago, in what appeared to be a Satanic ritual gone wrong, thirty-six mutilated bodies were discovered in a cellar in Highgate London. The sole survivor, thirteen-year-old Melissa Powell, was removed from the scene in a catatonic state. When the infamous Highgate Priestess transfers to Witchwood Prison, inmates complain that she's sending demons to attack them. How can prison guard, Wanda Jones, uncover the truth behind the priestess's power and avoid losing her sanity, her partner, and her freedom? The Highgate Priestess is a supernatural LGBT thriller set in a women's prison in North West England.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Five years ago, in what appeared to be a Satanic ritual gone wrong, thirty-six mutilated bodies were discovered in a cellar in Highgate London. The sole survivor, thirteen-year-old Melissa Powell, was removed from the scene in a catatonic state. When the infamous Highgate Priestess transfers to Witchwood Prison, inmates complain that she's sending demons to attack them. How can prison guard, Wanda Jones, uncover the truth behind the priestess's power and avoid losing her sanity, her partner, and her freedom? The Highgate Priestess is a supernatural LGBT thriller set in a women's prison in North West England.
Autorenporträt
Carmilla Voiez is a proudly bisexual and mildly autistic introvert who finds writing much easier than verbal communication. A life long Goth, living with two kids, two cats and a poet by the sea. She is passionate about horror, the alt scene, intersectional feminism, art, nature and animals. When not writing, she gets paid to hang out in a stately home and entertain tourists. ¿ ¿Carmilla grew up on a varied diet of horror. Her earliest influences as a teenage reader were Graham Masterton, Brian Lumley and Clive Barker mixed with the romance of Hammer Horror and the visceral violence of the first wave of video nasties. Fascinated by the Goth aesthetic and enchanted by threnodies of eighties Goth and post-punk music she evolved into the creature of darkness we find today. ¿ Her books are both extraordinarily personal and universally challenging. As Jef Withonef of Houston Press once said - "You do not read her books, you survive them."