lucifer's monologue, focuses on a story long before the genesis and the creation of humanity, according to Christian ideology.
but this story is nothing like you have told us so far, as this is the version of lucifer, the villain and the great tyrant of the Bible, which, comes to tell his version of events, from the beginning, even as he was banished to inferno.
Here lucifer tells us how it all started, why a lot of our questions, or rather because a lot of the holes found in the biblical version of the dispute between him and the supreme power he had at the time, and we It gives another perspective on the big picture.
Who is the villain and who is the hero? Or is there really a villain or a hero ?, are these questions, we will take all this intrigue plot, but ultimately it is the reader's opinion which will decide the answer.
and eventhough the story is narrated by lucifer, iconic characters, like, astaroth, satan, Mannon, leviathan, among others ... form a fundamental part in the development and the outcome of it.
the hehcos are located mainly in the infamous city of Zion, but yet unknown land inferno and mother also take a lot of influence in history.
many stories are seeking boast a good protagonist does not matter if it's good or bad, but this is clearly not that kind of story, empathy you can possibly have for any of the characters is just personal opinion, because none of them looking to impress no one, not even Lucifer himself, this being his own story, just come to have a frivolous version of a trascedendental done.
This is a completely fictional story, where we find a lot of references and names that may seem familiar to us are just more characters and situations that give life and substance to it.
Are you ready to know the other side of the coin ?.
The Devil himself.
At least, that's what they say.
There's a lot said about the Devil-so much, in fact, that it makes you wonder: what's the Devil's own side of the story?
They say the Devil is a he... a monstrous beast, a fallen angel, or a shadow lurking in the dark. They say he tempts, corrupts, destroys-always with a grin and a deal too good to refuse.
Kids grow up hearing that he's the whisperer of sins, the snake in every garden. He's cruel, calculating, and definitely not to be trusted.
Books and movies paint him as charming, impossibly handsome, and so dangerously tempting that you'd risk kissing your way straight to Hell.
Some who consider themselves learned will tell you none of this is true-that angels, fallen or otherwise, are pure spirits, without bodies, without sex
But what if they're wrong?
What if the Devil is a woman- a darkly exquisite femme fatales, who's been quietly fuming for centuries about how we keep getting her story wrong?
What if we are considered sinners for butchering her story and turning her into some horned caricature of evil.
Forget the horns, the pitchfork, and the outdated clichés. Because the devil might just as well be a woman.