Bound by Ink
$5.99
Heat Level
HIGH HEAT: multiple open-door sex scenes with descriptive physical details, some body fluids, and some adult words for body parts. Physical intimacy is part of the plot.
Trigger Warning(s)
terminal illness; death; Severe mental illness and depressive episodes; Explicit sexual intimacy; Intimate partner violence; imprisonment; parental abandonment; explicit language; ritualistic self harm; physical violence
Four centuries after they were penned, Emma DiMarco discovers a collection of diaries recording a world where magic was woven into the fabric of the community. The diaries were written by Amora scribe and herbal alchemist Sara Cortese while she found love with healer Bethany Clement in the shadow of violent uprisings and attacks by malevolent creatures from another realm.
Though Sara’s writings provided a window to Amora culture before the rise of the Commarasi, their inclusion in Roots in Ink only told part of the story. Going beyond the pages of her diaries, Bound by Ink is a Scions of Belhaven novella that brings to life Sara and Bethany’s love story.
Highlights
- Sapphic fantasy romance
- Prequel but better as a sequel
- Middle-aged MILFs
- Hurt-comfort
- Queernormative universe
- A quest for information
- Fugitive soulmates
- Earthly and mythical creatures
- Magical healing and medicinal plants
All ebook orders are fulfilled in epub format
- No DRM
- Compatible with Kindle, Kobo, Onyx, PocketBook and Nook E-readers.
You must be logged in to post a review.
Ariella is a former journalist, but uses “former” loosely. Her curiosity for all things is insatiable and research is her favorite part of any project.
She writes cozy contemporary and high stakes paranormal romances. Her work is steamy and open door absolutely not intended for readers who are under 18.
Her millennial protagonists are bisexual, neurodivergent, and live with chronic mental illness. They mostly have their shit together and Ariella chronicles their coming-of-middle-age stories.
She writes these types of characters because she’s a bisexual millennial with adult-diagnosed ADHD who never saw herself portrayed positively in books or film.
When she’s not writing, she teaches yoga and falls behind on laundry. She lives in the suburbs of Raleigh, North Carolina with her husband, child, a collection of aging pets, and a flock of chickens that won’t stop tearing up the new plants in her flower garden.







Slippers and Songs (Brodyr Alarch #1)
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.