Blood Coven
the blood bound series, book one
Out Now!
“There was no breeze that evening, but the trees were whispering in the voices of girls…”
Red only dreams of escape from her abusers, that is, until Alina welcomes her into her coven. As she begins to take back her autonomy by way of witchcraft, her father decides to sacrifice her to the Wolf–a legendary creature that has haunted their town for over four hundred years. Refusing to be a pawn in her father’s plan, Red uses her newfound strength and takes control of her destiny. Instead of succumbing to her fate, she wields it, and in the process, unearths the true history of the Wolf, and the man he once was.
“There was no breeze that evening, but the trees were whispering in the voices of girls…”
Red only dreams of escape from her abusers, that is, until Alina welcomes her into her coven. As she begins to take back her autonomy by way of witchcraft, her father decides to sacrifice her to the Wolf–a legendary creature that has haunted their town for over four hundred years. Refusing to be a pawn in her father’s plan, Red uses her newfound strength and takes control of her destiny. Instead of succumbing to her fate, she wields it, and in the process, unearths the true history of the Wolf, and the man he once was.
"Enthralling, mystical, full of action, moody, haunting, melancholic, impassioned. Voerman excels in crafting a mythos that structurally works like a Red Riding Hood retelling but gives it the depth and texture I’ve always wanted from that tale. She digs deep into buried psyche, archetype, and motivation in a nuanced way that is neither obvious nor trite."
Review from Stephanie Kemler, author of "Bloodborn"
"The author does an excellent job of creating the worlds of both characters and writing rich and flawed characters that I could root for as well as creating fully developed villains that didn’t follow the traditional tropes."
-Goodreads Review
"Blood Coven is the richest, most immersive and engrossing fantasy novel I've read in a very long time."
-Goodreads Review