The Fall of Lilith – Fantasy Angels Series Book 1

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The Fall of Lilith spins an engaging and fresh perspective on the biblical tale of creation, making it a story you can get swept into.

The Fall of Lilith

In The Fall of Lilith, Vashti Quiroz-Vega crafts an irresistible new take on heaven and hell that boldly lays bare the passionate, conflicted natures of God’s first creations: the resplendent celestial beings known as angels.

If you think you know their story, think again.

Endowed with every gift of mind, body, and spirit, the angels reside in a paradise bounded by divine laws, chief of which are obedience to God, and celibacy. In all other things, the angels possess free will, that they may add in their own unique ways to God’s unfolding plan.

Lilith, most exquisite of angels, finds the rules arbitrary and stifling. She yearns to follow no plan but her own: a plan that leads to the throne now occupied by God himself. With clever words and forbidden caresses, Lilith sows discontent among the angels. Soon the virus of rebellion has spread to the greatest of them all: Lucifer.

Now, as angel is pitted against angel, old loyalties are betrayed and friendships broken. Lust, envy, pride, and ambition arise to shake the foundations of heaven . . . and beyond. For what begins as a war in paradise invades God’s newest creation, a planet known as Earth. It is there, in the garden called Eden, that Lilith, Lucifer, and the other rebel angels will seek a final desperate victory—or a venomous revenge.

[A] compelling narrative that. . strays far from traditional biblical text… A well-written, descriptive, and dark creation story.

kirkus review

The overall effect of The Fall of Lilith is that it spins an engaging and fresh perspective on the biblical tale of creation, making it a story you can get swept into.

reader’s favorite review

The Fall of Lilith is an amazing story. I especially loved the vivid descriptions. The magnitude and beauty of heaven and earth is conveyed so well—and the horror of the fallen angels’ suffering. The characters are also nuanced and fascinating.

Elizabeth Stock, Editor