Rock 'n' roll isn't dead. It just took a break to reload.New Mexico Desert, 1968. Jim Morrison stumbles through sand, booze, and visions-the Lizard King, sick of himself and the role stitched onto his skin. He's heading straight toward his scripted end when a mage blocks his path in the middle of the night: Elias, a rogue CIA asset and off-duty telepath, a guy who's seen too many mind-control experiments to still believe in reality as it seems. The offer he makes is simple, and terrifying: "Save rock 'n' roll... or die alone in a bathtub in Paris."Behind that ultimatum lies The Great Devourer, an ancient entity rooted deep within the Pentagon, feeding on chaos, engineered wars, and revolutions crushed in the cradle. It realized that to silence the future, you just have to strangle the soundtrack. Its plan is surgical: eliminate the prophets of music one by one, all at twenty-seven, turning inspiration into a statistic. Brian Jones drowning in a Sussex pool, Jimi Hendrix suffocating in a hotel bed, Janis Joplin slumped on the floor, Jim Morrison playing out the tragic myth in a Parisian tub. All written, all foreseen.What the Devourer didn't account for is the resistance. Snatching them from the obituary columns at the last second and declared dead to the world, the members of Club 27 become a ghost squad: Brian emerging from the water, Jimi learning to bend storms, Janis brawling with her own demons (and everyone else's), Jim traversing deserts and cities like they're the same twisted dream. From a Robert F. Kennedy assassination that goes off-script, to the rooftops of London where the Beatles play under siege by cops and invisible entities, down to the basements of power where MK-Ultra is tested and Latin formulas sound more like threats than prayers-Club 27 tries to sabotage History before History zeros them out.Weapons of choice: guitars used as talismans, vinyls that double as portals, improvised spells based on Lorem Ipsum, a tired, pissed-off mage, and an obscene amount of sarcasm, profanity, and black irony. The result is a Gonzo novel where rock stars aren't sanctified but dirtied up, used, and relaunched as antiheroes in a metaphysical war: American Gods stumbling into Fight Club, written as if Tarantino took a music history textbook hostage and drew all over it in blood.This isn't a biography. It's a blasphemous, violent, poetic sabotage. The music isn't over. It just decided to get even.WARNING: THIS NOVEL MAY CAUSE SEVERE SIDE EFFECTS IN READERS LACKING IMAGINATION OR A SENSE OF HUMOR-AS WELL AS ANYONE NOT YET READY TO TREAT THE THIRD REICH WITH THE NECESSARY DISRESPECT AND LAUGH AT CREATIVE BLASPHEMY.