I • II

Give Me My Sin Again

Collection:
Devotion & Ruin
William Shakespeare
Romeo and Juliet (1597)

Spoken in the charged stillness of their first meeting, the language of devotion is already inseparable from transgression. What begins as reverence turns quickly toward risk, as if desire must cross a boundary to prove itself real.

The danger is not resisted. It is returned to.

Select interior:

“Sin from my lips?
O trespass sweetly urged!
Give me my sin again.”

William Shakespeare
Romeo and Juliet (1597)

The Complete Collection

I • I
Emily Brontë
Wuthering Heights (1847)
I • II
William Shakespeare
Romeo and Juliet (1597)
I • III
Gustave Flaubert
Madame Bovary (1856)

Material & Form

Each notebook is produced as a casebound hardback, printed on 90gsm paper and finished with a durable matte laminate. The format is A5 — a size chosen for its balance between portability and presence. Available in blank, lined, or grid interiors, each volume is designed for sustained writing. Printed and bound in the United Kingdom.

Format
A5 (148 x 210 mm)
Binding
Casebound hardcover
Pages
128 pages, 90 gsm
Interior
Blank, lined, or grid
Production
Printed and bound in the UK