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Rachel Hunter says that no one should have expected her to be more than her illness. She became a victim of her own desire and a thing of woe. Then she became something more.
I met Rachel by funny coincidence. I have a series of fantasy novels called The Empyrical Tales and she is about to publish her own novel called Empyreal Fate. Independently, we are both writing about our ideas of a heaven-like place. In that regard, I have to assume we are both romantics, dreamers. I had to have a kindred s ...more
I met Rachel by funny coincidence. I have a series of fantasy novels called The Empyrical Tales and she is about to publish her own novel called Empyreal Fate. Independently, we are both writing about our ideas of a heaven-like place. In that regard, I have to assume we are both romantics, dreamers. I had to have a kindred s ...more

Rachel Hunter’s “Perfect Nothing,” Story Seven in Mark Miller’s One Series, bravely and passionately tells the tale of a nearly fatal struggle with Anorexia Nervosa. By using language reminiscent of Edgar Allen Poe and other masters of horror, Hunter makes the point that her own true life tale is as surreal and filled with horror as anything the imagination can devise: “I cannot escape it; the depths of my despair claim me as the growls of my belly slowly claim my life. As I clutch my knees, the
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Jul 28, 2012
Alicia
marked it as to-read