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The Fable of the Boar is a lush and merciless gothic horror fable in the tradition of The Wicker Man and classic Hammer horror. It tells the story of Dr. Frederick Miller, a privileged and predatory Manhattan concierge physician who is seduced into the ancient, beautiful, and blood-bound village of Dysgood-a place that does not exist on maps, and will not let him leave unchanged. Frederick is chosen as the May King, the town's spring sacrifice, when he is presented with the Black Bit: a smooth, warm coin with no inscription and no purpose-except to mark him. Claimed by Caerwyn "Winnie" Jones,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Fable of the Boar is a lush and merciless gothic horror fable in the tradition of The Wicker Man and classic Hammer horror. It tells the story of Dr. Frederick Miller, a privileged and predatory Manhattan concierge physician who is seduced into the ancient, beautiful, and blood-bound village of Dysgood-a place that does not exist on maps, and will not let him leave unchanged. Frederick is chosen as the May King, the town's spring sacrifice, when he is presented with the Black Bit: a smooth, warm coin with no inscription and no purpose-except to mark him. Claimed by Caerwyn "Winnie" Jones, daughter of the town's matriarchal high priestess and its master physician, Frederick is adored, pampered, and slowly transformed. Over the course of the year, he becomes grotesquely pig-like: sweating, snorting, devouring meat with abandon. As the seasons change, so too does he-fattened not just in body but in ego, a man who believes he is in control even as the trap closes. Dysgood is a place of impossible perfection, curated beauty, and ancient rules. Its people are kind, courteous, and utterly ruthless. Their justice is folkloric, not moral. Frederick is welcomed with open arms-and led step by step toward the altar. The story builds toward a final, inevitable ritual: on the anniversary of his wedding, the May King is crowned, hunted, slaughtered, and devoured. The boar returns to the forest. The cycle endures. Unflinching, elegant, and grim, The Fable of the Boar is a story of seduction and slaughter, consent and consequence, faerie law and human hubris. It is a tale in which every kindness hides a knife, and every promise is a trap. Told with folkloric resonance and brutal beauty, it is not a story of survival, but of justice-the kind written in blood, and older than gods.