Lucien D’Aramont writes epic fantasy steeped in courtly intrigue, contested succession, and the perilous architecture of power. His stories unfold not on distant battlefields, but within throne rooms, council chambers, and shadowed corridors where alliances fracture and loyalty is rarely pure.
In the Thrones of Silver and Ash saga, D’Aramont explores rulership as both burden and trial. Magic is not spectacle, but institution. Bloodlines are tested, artifacts judge kings, and every victory extracts a cost. His protagonists are not chosen heroes, but reluctant figures forced to confront the price of legitimacy and the moral compromises required to hold a kingdom together.
Known for layered political maneuvering, shifting factions, and characters shaped by exile and expectation, D’Aramont builds worlds where power is neither inherited nor easily kept. His work blends the grandeur of epic fantasy with the precision of court drama, creating narratives that feel both sweeping and intensely personal.
Readers who crave strategy over spectacle and consequence over convenience will find themselves at home in his kingdoms of silver and ash.

