
Eros and Psyche in Dialogue reimagines the ancient myth as a contemporary conversation between a wounded human spirit and the eternal force of love.
At its heart is the soul’s arduous quest for a love that bridges mortal and divine—one that heals existential wounds and leads to self-remembrance.
Psyche speaks for the fragmented self: vulnerable, doubtful, yearning for meaning amid fear and the illusions of ego-driven ties. Eros answers as steady guide and challenger, drawing her toward awakening.
Across twenty-one dialogues, they explore the metaphysics of desire, the possibility of soulmates, the ache of forgetting one’s origin, and the ways love can outlast time, conflict—even death.
The frame nods to Apuleius: Psyche returns to help humanity remember, while Eros keeps vigil in disguise.
Quiet influences—from Neoplatonism to the real story of Héloïse and Abelard—echo through the text, underscoring love’s redemptive arc.
The prose is lyrical yet clear: intimate, reflective, and philosophical without becoming a treatise.
Like a Socratic exchange touched by mysticism, Psyche’s urgency meets Eros’s spacious wisdom, generating a rhythm that mirrors inner struggle and growth.
For readers drawn to myth retellings and contemplative literature, this is a meditation on love not as romance alone, but as a sacred force of transcendence—a reminder to recognize the divine imprint within.
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