
Faceless explores the boundaries between identity, body, and disappearance.
After a violent argument, twenty-three-year-old Dionysis shoots himself and loses half his face. Hidden behind screens, he lives in the shadows until a doctor offers him a chance at a face transplant. But can another person’s face restore what was lost — the years, the love, the self?
A lyrical novel about bioethics, the body, and the fragile ways we exist — and are seen — in the digital age.
[Faceless, Katerina Malakate, Metaichmio ed, 2020]

The Plan follows Haris, a middle-aged writer who flees to Paris as Greece descends into chaos. Behind him, a country burns under authoritarian rule; ahead, exile offers only the illusion of freedom.
Between memory and survival, The Plan explores how fear reshapes love, identity, and responsibility — and what remains of a self when one’s homeland is lost.
A taut, poetic novel about isolation, resistance, and the quiet courage of those who endure.
[The Plan, Katerina Malakate, Melani ed, 2016]

No One Wants to Die begins when an elderly English woman in a coma awakens in the body of her young Ukrainian caregiver. Drunk on the sudden return of youth, she roams the streets of Athens, pursued by her own ghosts.
Around her orbit a migrant worker who sees a green light in the sky and a granddaughter slipping into madness — all bound by a single truth: no one wants to die.
A lyrical meditation on mortality, faith, and the impossible wish to live forever.
[No one wants to Die, katerina Malakate, Haramada ed, 2013]