New Release
The Influencer's canvas
The Influencer’s Canvas explores what happens when art meets algorithm, authenticity confronts performance, and creativity navigates the digital maze. My most experimental novel yet—featuring multilingual dialogue and visual storytelling elements that push literary boundaries.
New book 2026
Project Mirror
Your face just crashed. Reboot required.
In a world of neural beauty filters, one woman hunts glitches: frozen smiles on Zoom, clashing features in the feed. She resets stacks, erases flaws, convinced she’s smashing the genetic lottery.
But perfection demands perfect minds.
Dive into the filtered future we’re building. Pre-order now and unmask the truth.
A Word From The Author
Writing The Influencer’s Canvas felt like painting with pixels instead of pigments—each chapter required balancing analog creativity with digital reality. The characters emerged from countless nail art sessions with content creators who trusted me with their unfiltered truths. This story honors both the art and the artifice of our hyperconnected age.
Julia Zolotova
Writing & publishing since 2021
From London nail salons to luxury labyrinths, Eastern empires to digital hearts — each book peels back another layer of modern identity. Explore the complete collection that established my reputation for psychological insight wrapped in cultural sophistication.
Blog

An Unexpected Connection
Saturday workshop at Pushkin House brought together Ukrainians documenting their London experience through collaborative mapping. I went because diaspora navigation fascinates me. How we create mental maps of belonging in unfamiliar cities, how geography becomes emotional rather than physical. Met Lydia Grigorieva there. Ukrainian poet and photo-artist who works with

Hertfordshire Press Awards
I attended the Hertfordshire Press Award Ceremony at Yunus Emre Institute in Fitzrovia this weekend. Two-day literary festival organized by Eurasian Creative Guild and Hertfordshire Press. Over a hundred people from twenty countries. First ceremony since 2019 at the British Library, making the return especially significant. I went because a

Surrealism Meets Daily Life
“Objects of Desire: Surrealism and Design 1924-Today” at the Design Museum proved that avant-garde art inevitably infiltrates mainstream culture. Salvador Dalí’s melting clocks appeared on furniture, while René Magritte’s visual paradoxes influenced contemporary product design. The exhibition traced how surrealist principles — unexpected juxtapositions, dream logic, subconscious exploration — now