Cyrro is a fiercely intimate novel about the mind when love and terror are born from the same place.
Jane is a teenage girl trapped in a constant battle with her own mind. She moves between hospitals, psychiatric offices, and memories that refuse to fit together, trying to survive a family past marked by chaos, mental illness, and abandonment. Diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, Jane no longer knows whom to trust: not the adults around her, not her memories, not even herself. When Cyrro reappears—an angel made of cloth, a childhood toy, a presence impossible to define—her fragile balance begins to fracture.
Through letters, sessions with Doctor Haggar, and scenes of raw emotional intensity, Cyrro explores the boundary between reality and imagination, between love and self-destruction, between the will to live and the temptation to disappear. The novel plunges into the psychology of a borderline mind with no filters and no concessions—brutally honest, lyrical, and at times unsettling.
This is not a story about being cured.
It is a story about enduring when your own mind becomes your worst enemy.
Dark, poetic, disturbing, and profoundly human, Cyrro is a novel for readers who want more than a plot: they want an experience that cuts through them and does not leave them unchanged.