In a land where memory is fragile and names are power, an ancient force begins to stir. It does not conquer with armies, nor speak with threats. It erases.
Five kings, bound by blood and old betrayal, must unite against a darkness that feeds on forgetting. But the true danger is not what they face — it's what they no longer remember.
As histories unravel and truths fade into myth, one question
What happens to a world that chooses to forget? Where Names Go to Die A Tale of the Six Kingdoms
In a land where memory is fragile and names are power, an ancient force begins to stir. It does not conquer with armies, nor speak with threats. It erases.
Five kings, bound by blood and old betrayal, must unite against a darkness that feeds on forgetting. But the true danger is not what they face — it's what they no longer remember.
As histories unravel and truths fade into myth, one question remains:
What happens to a world that chooses to forget?
Where Names Go to Die is a literary dark fantasy steeped in atmosphere, philosophical undertones, and emotional weight — for readers who seek stories that echo long after the final page.
📖 Perfect for fans of:
Guy Gavriel Kay, Patricia McKillip, and slow-burn epic tales
Dark fantasy with emotional weight and philosophical undertones
Stories where silence is the enemy, and memory the last resistance
🗝️ Inside you'll find:
A self-contained story (~20,000 words) with emotional closure
Poetic prose, immersive worldbuilding, and introspective themes
Book 1 of The Six Kingdoms — a new saga of memory and myth
T. Pap writes fantasy that whispers more than it shouts. Influenced by the quiet gravitas of Guy Gavriel Kay and the lyrical depth of Patricia McKillip, he crafts stories where memory is sacred, silence has weight, and forgetting can be a curse.
His debut, Where Names Go to Die, marks the beginning of The Six Kingdoms — a saga woven not with swordplay, but with sorrow, myth, and the ache of things lost.
He believes that fantasy should stir the soul, not just dazzle the eye. When he’s not writing, he walks quiet paths, chases forgotten ideas, and studies the cracks where light slips through.