A Finite is one who reincarnates until their purpose is fulfilled.
1973, is a story, an introduction if you wish, of thirty-two thousand years of existence. In this introductory book, you will meet a soul family of Immortals, Homo Lycanus and Vampuris Originalis. As well as a foe or two.
Chiara, a Finite, and a Beowulf-Runner, shares her story, beginning with her penultimate lifetime, as she shares a snapshot of her reincarnation, as a strong-willed young woman of mixed-race Navajo descent born in the 1950s. In what she calls an unimportant lifetime. She is blindsided one day in 1972 when her Twin Flame, Eamon, walks onto a Vietnam army base, where she is following the call of her purpose. Unfortunately, Eamon, the great Draegon-Rider of fables, is an unawakened Finite, or in Chiara's words, it is just another clusterfuck to add to the gawd-damn war she is a part of.
Chiara draws on her millennia of knowledge gained right under the noses of those who would destroy her and Eamon and nudges their destiny back on track.
As Chiara likes to say, find comfort in probable improbability and the ordinarily extraordinary. Because that is where you truly exist. Unseen in plain sight. After all, where better to hide the bearers of the prophecy? It is time to weave together the legends torn apart by past storytellers and show the world the complete story for the first time.
Chiara is not for the faint-hearted. She is the quintessential anti-hero, enigmatic, unapologetic, opinionated, and holds fast to powerful beliefs and dark coping mechanisms, with a turn of phrase that has defied the establishment for centuries and would make a sailor blush. The fabric of her story is woven with trigger topics, the darkest moments of history, both ancient and modern, addiction, overdose, slavery, abuse, death, reincarnation and the subjugation of women through the ages.
This book is printed in a typeface called OpenDyslexic.
OpenDyslexic is a typeface designed against some common symptoms of dyslexia. Letters have heavily weighted bottoms to indicate direction. You are able to figure out which part of the letter is down, which aids in recognizing the correct letter, and sometimes helps to keep your brain from rotating them around. Consistently weighted bottoms can also help reinforce the line of text. The unique shapes of each letter can help prevent confusion through flipping and swapping.
Paragraphs and Chapters have been kept short to encourage those who live with ADD/ADHD to keep reading.