Fall Into The Storm

Some stories refuse to stay buried.
So do some men.

The Cursed Poet Archives


Some stories refuse to stay buried. So do some men.

You’ve read the story. Now open the archive he never meant for you to find.

For two hundred years, the Villa Diodati kept his secrets. The letters he wrote and never sent. The confessions scrawled by candlelight when the curse pressed too close. The poems history knows — and the ones it was never allowed to see.

Fall into the Storm is the companion to The Cursed Poet — a collector’s archive spanning two centuries of one immortal poet’s longing.

Inside the archive:

The poems of 1816 — Byron’s real verses, written in the Year Without a Summer on the shores of Lake Geneva, where the curse began ✦ Darkness — the descent: obsession, ruin, and the woman who became his shadow
Mirage — the long haunting: memory, illusion, and the love he could touch but never keep
Eternity — the cursed verses: poems written across two hundred years of immortality, in his voice alone, published here for the first time

How Byron Found Me — the true story of a Halloween night in Nernier, a storm over the lake, and the stone where this saga began

History wrote one Byron. The curse wrote another. This is where they meet.

A companion to The Cursed Poet Saga. Best devoured after dark , preferably during a storm.

I had a dream, which was not all a dream.

Lord Byron

RELEASE DATE: Oct 15, 2026

Available in: eBook • Audiobook • Signed Paperback

Description

Fall into the Storm
The Cursed Poet Archives

The story ended. The archive remained.

Step beyond the pages of The Cursed Poet — into the letters he never sent, the confessions written by candlelight, and the poems that survived two centuries of the curse.

✦ Byron’s private letters, unsealed
✦ Deleted scenes too dark
✦ The real poetry of 1816, and the cursed verses that came after
✦ How Byron found me: the true story behind the saga

Coming October 15. The archive is opening.

 

 

 

“Darkness had no need Of aid from them—She was the Universe.”

Lord Byron, Darkness (1816)