In the aftermath of a sacred and devastating love, only a permanent winter remains, left to reside in the cold ashes of remembrance. Winterfall is a profound lyrical descent into the frozen wastes of memory, where passion’s flame becomes a cold fire and ruins are reconsecrated as sanctuaries of loss under a pallid dawn. If Michael E. Spiggos’s debut, Under the Rose, was the sacred war of love, then Winterfall is its stark, philosophical armistice. This is poetry as austere exposure: a brilliant, chilling exploration of the permanent emotional climate forged in passion’s aftermath. In the lineage of Plath, the shadows of Poe, the dark romanticism of Baudelaire, and the fierce spirit of Robert E. Howard, Spiggos does not offer solace—but rather the breathtaking clarity of a survivor who has built a fortress from the ruins. Mapping the serene, brutal clarity of a heart that has learned to breathe within its own winter, this is a modern masterpiece of elegant despair and hard-won silence. “Lost I was, Forsaken, in the sweet maelstrom of my torment, My lingering thoughts, gently seduced by the sublime beauty of our fall, In the grim clarity of the space between lust and desire.”
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