Syrenya
The Naked Queen
Born Without a Gown: The Myth Behind The Naked Queen
By Alan R. Hall
In a court haunted by cruelty, where sin wore a crown and ritual was mistaken for righteousness, I found a story that demanded to be told.
The Naked Queen is not just a fantasy. It is a reckoning.
This novel began with a question: what happens when someone walks into power completely exposed—without weapons, without clothes, without fear?
Syrenya, the woman at the center of this tale, does exactly that. She enters a brutal court where “First Night” is a ritual of shame, and with nothing but her voice and her skin, she changes everything.
Writing her was both liberating and difficult. She had to be fearless, yet gentle. A lover, a savior, a challenger of kings. Through her, I could explore the line between sensuality and sovereignty. What does it mean to be seen completely—and still hold your dignity? What does it take to face power not with violence, but with truth?
Set before the rise of Camelot, the story blends myth, politics, and the deeply personal. You’ll meet queens and traitors, priests and rebels. But at its heart, this is Syrenya’s journey—from a whisper to a legend.
Whether you came for the fantasy, the fierce women, the forbidden rituals, or the transformation of a kingdom, I hope this tale stirs something deeper: the reminder that even the most broken stories can be rewritten—by a voice that refuses to be silenced.
The throne is waiting.
News!
Whether you came for the fantasy, the fierce women, or the transformation of a kingdom, I hope this tale stirs something deeper — as discussed in FOX4 of the novel.

Alan R. Hall To Showcase ‘Syrenya: The Naked Queen’ at London Bookfair 2025













