Synopsis of Three Times Four 'All: The Raven Ruses


With over three thousand years of certainty held tightly in Linda Turner's hands, she battles her personal and real demons to rid an unrighteous town from the supernatural evils foretold to her in the King James Bible. Her mortal enemies--neighbors, friends, and relatives--are condemned by the scriptures for their faithless sexuality and Godless lifestyles within the heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual communities. In fact, the sexual behavior of her adversaries embodies the worst each group has to offer any society. Unfortunately for Linda, the conduct codes concerning their pleasures of flesh are included in the same sacred books that profess the existence of familiar spirits, evil witches, and demonic possession; therefore, if one exists so must the other. The penalty for theses crimes is, of course, death; and the devout woman foolishly commits faith-based wrathful acts against society. A sequence of moral attacks and counter revenges draw her mercilessly into the true clutches of unending darkness and righteous bloodletting.

Without God's intervention against the rising religion and supernatural forces of the Goddess, Linda Turner's intended helpless victims become the formidable predators in a sequence of escalating perverse and disturbing sexual encounters and religious violence.



Warning: This psychological thriller contains a basis for an anti-catechism of the Judeo-Christian belief.

Among a myriad of the fundamentalists' blatant hypocrisies and missionary ambitions, demonic excerpts from the Holy Bible--the supernatural origins for evil withes, familiar spirits, possessed individuals, and perverse sexual standards--are quoted in this novel to justify their existence in the story line but are patronized by Naamah's Amphigory: a blasphemous Elizabethan rewrite of the ancient scriptures.

The sexual themes in this book include a diametric and subtle comparison of the incestuous births and relationships documented tin the King James Bible; a bestiality interpretation of the half-beast-man who devoutly worships the LORD GOD in Revelation; a re-creation of sexual religious violence; an exploration of atypical homophobic motivations; and a depiction of objectionable behaviors by heterosexuals, bisexuals, and homosexuals.

Because of the demonstrations of sadomasochistic personalities, the presentations of recreational drug use, and the refutations of righteous morality created by interpreting ancient passages; the faithful could misconstrue this literary work of fiction as a message from the Devil.