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Shadows and thrones is a collection of 67 poems that confront the forces shaping modern life—power, wealth, silence, identity, memory, and moral choice—while remaining grounded in the everyday human experience. It explores how people live, endure, and lead when systems strain, promises fracture, and certainty becomes rare.
Moving between the public and the personal, these poems examine the visible and invisible thrones that govern society: political authority, economic pressure, cultural expectation, inherited beliefs, and the unspoken rules that decide who is heard and who is overlooked. At the same time, the collection turns inward, tracing the quieter struggles of discipline, healing, self-definition, grief, ancestry, and emotional resilience.
This is not a book of abstraction. Its language is deliberate and accessible, written to be understood across generations. Some poems are sharp and confrontational, questioning injustice, inequality, and the misuse of power. Others are gentle and reflective, offering space for recovery, remembrance, and moral grounding. Together, they form a body of work that values clarity over spectacle and responsibility over outrage.
Recurring throughout the collection is the belief that dignity is not granted by position or possession, but practiced through action—through how people think, speak, build, remember, and care for one another. The poems resist both cynicism and blind optimism, choosing instead a disciplined hope rooted in accountability, curiosity, and shared humanity.
Shadows and Thrones is for readers who are navigating a complex world without surrendering their conscience. It speaks to those questioning inherited systems, carrying unseen burdens, rebuilding after loss, or searching for language that honors both struggle and purpose. Rather than offering easy answers, the book invites reflection, dialogue, and ethical awareness.
Ultimately, this collection argues that while shadows and thrones may define the age, they do not define the human spirit. What endures is the choice to act with integrity, to remember what matters, and to leave the world—however imperfect—more conscious than it was found.