In Dream-walking Savage, Harry Edgar Palacio offers a poetic and hallucinatory descent into memory, masculinity, exile, and desire. Set between imagined geographies and real emotional terrains-from the Caribbean to New York City-this genre-bending work fuses narrative fragments, surreal prose, and dream logic to explore the complexities of youth, love, and becoming.
Through the voice of a haunted and sensual narrator, readers are taken on a vivid odyssey of coming-of-age encounters, mystical visions, and spiritual reckoning. Figures like Sundari and Mena-symbolic and corporeal-represent not just muses, but the layered dimensions of longing, identity, and cosmic inheritance.
Raw, experimental, and unapologetically vulnerable, Dream-walking Savage defies convention. It's not a memoir, nor a novel, nor a collection of poetry-yet it is all three at once. For readers drawn to the works of Rimbaud, Baudelaire, or the sacred profanity of Beat literature, this book is a storm: elliptical, electric, and unforgettable.
Related Subjects
Poetry