Saint Woman

Dark Poetry • Literary Nonfiction • Sapphic Gothic • Cerebral Kink Education


Saint Woman is the opening volume of The Tapestry of Me, a three-book literary and memoir journey exploring desire, devotion, power, identity, spirituality, and transformation through dark lyrical poetry and prose.

Blending gothic imagery, mythopoetic storytelling, sapphic longing, and educational discussions of cerebral eroticism, the collection explores the places where language, ritual, imagination, and intimacy converge.

Inside the Book

• Dark lyrical and mythopoetic poetry
• Sapphic desire, devotion, and intimacy
• Gothic and Dark Romantic influences
• Symbolism, ritual, and archetypal imagery
• Explorations of power, identity, and awakening
• Educational sections on cerebral kink and mental forms of arousal
• Discussions of literary, psychological, and emotional dimensions of desire
• Interactive exercises inspired by roleplay, ritual, and imaginative exploration
• The opening volume of The Tapestry of Me trilogy

About the Work

Originally conceived as a poetry collection, Saint Woman evolved into a hybrid literary work combining dark poetry, literary nonfiction, and educational exploration.

At its core, the book examines the relationship between desire and devotion—not only through physical intimacy, but through the erotic architecture of the mind. Readers are introduced to concepts surrounding cerebral kink, language-based arousal, power exchange, anticipation, symbolism, ritual, and the ways imagination itself can become an intimate space.

While the book stands on its own as an exploration of desire, ritual, identity, and transformation, it also serves as the opening volume of The Tapestry of Me—a three-book memoir journey examining sexuality, spirituality, trauma, self-discovery, and personal reclamation.

Within that larger narrative, Saint Woman represents a period of awakening and reclamation: the rediscovery of the body, the exploration of desire, and the process of coming into one’s own sexual identity. Through poetry, symbolism, education, and mythopoetic storytelling, the work explores what it means to move from shame toward self-acceptance, and from silence toward self-definition.

Drawing from Gothic literature, Dark Romanticism, mythology, religious symbolism, and queer experience, Saint Woman invites readers into a world where longing becomes liturgy, language becomes ritual, and devotion becomes transformation.

As the first volume of The Tapestry of Me, it marks the beginning of a larger literary journey that continues through The Witch Hare and concludes with My Demons Have Demons.

For Readers Who Enjoy

• Gothic literature and Dark Romanticism
• Dark poetry and prose poetry
• Sapphic and queer literature
• Mythology, symbolism, and ritual themes
• Religious imagery and spiritual exploration
• Psychological and cerebral approaches to desire
• BDSM education and power-exchange dynamics
• Explorations of intimacy beyond the physical

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A Note on First Readers

Every book has a moment where it stops belonging only to its writer and begins its life in the hands of others.

This section is a small acknowledgement of that beginning, and a quiet thank you to the first readers who chose to meet Saint Woman there.

Independent work is built one reader at a time, and I will always remember those who arrived first.

To the first two readers of this book—thank you.

Bombastic_Sabrina & SashaLotrian