When Kate Forsyth first decided to write a novel about the myth of Eros and Psykhe, she never imagined that her life would begin to take the shape of her art. " Psykhe is a reimaging of the ancient myth of Eros and Psykhe, a story of a young women who was so 'strangely and wonderfully fair' that people began to worship her as a living incarnation of Aphrodite," Forsyth tells 9honey. But as she wrote her novel, making the decision to make her heroine visually impaired, Forsyth never expected to lose her own eyesight along the way.
READ MORE: Tennis star Jannik Sinner confirms relationship with Anna Kalinskaya " It was a really uncanny experience," she says. "I was working on the earliest stages of my novel, and playing with all the possible meanings of 'fair'. "I decided to make my character a person with albinism, to make her fairness truly unusual and striking.
Researching albinism, I discovered that the condition is often accompanied by vision impairment." Forsyth explains that since according to the myth, her heroine was forbidden to see the face of her lover, it seemed like the perfect fit. But gradually.
as she began to write, she says she began to feel her eyes aching, her vision blurring, and throbbing headaches. "I went to see an eye specialist. He told me I had pre-macular fibrosis, and that if I did not have surgery straightaway I could lose my eyesight," she says.
"So I went into hospital and had what is called an epiretinal peel, the surgeon peeling away .