The Melanie saga, by the writer Wilian Arias, is a great story, an endearing narration with intense and well-developed characters, and at the same time a story with an unparalleled degree of complexity. In the complete development of Melanie's tetralogy, Wilian Arias plunges us into a convoluted plot line, which is full of narrative twists that make the story more complex, but at the same time, close circles and complete narratives in an elegant way and in its fair and precise time. There is a maxim in storytelling that a story is only as great as its best villain. In that sense, and in simple terms, the villains of most stories are made by a web of evil inherent to their being; beings who seek to cause evil and suffering for the mere fact of doing so and for the enjoyment that this produces. However, Wilian Arias shows us villains who are not villains, beings of light that can become villains and victims who, with the right twist, become victimizers and who, with the precise reason, show the reader why their actions, making them human and making the reader empathize with them. Thus, Wilian makes master use of a villain, putting good and evil in interchangeable positions. The complete Melanie saga is full of magic, fantasy, reality and social criticism, but in which Wilian Arias impeccably amalgamates, from beginning to end, the crudest aspects of reality, achieving a new style of modern magical realism. a sort of magical neo-realism, in which the fusion of value and anti-value, social, gender-sex and human behavior themes are intertwined in unexpected ways with a story that, from its beginnings, suggests an idyllic and chivalrous narration, but that with the passage of the first chapters is fully introduced into the deep message and human criticism that Wilian seeks to capture in his most extensive work. In the first book, we are introduced to the main characters, and with the use of a lively and changing narrative rhythm, the author establishes a fantastic and magical narrative voice and style, which will quickly transmute into what he visualized while creating his work: a text loaded with allegories, metaphors of life and criticism of human behavior. The second volume, Wilian delves into the story, the characters, the roots of the strongest and most intense antagonisms, through the use of an elaborate, mature, delicate and worked language, and opens narrative circles and character arcs that will masterfully work with the subsequent development of the work. In the third book of the saga, the narrative focuses primarily on the use of the retelling resource, going back steps on the story, providing explanations, reasons and elements that enrich the arc of the previously introduced characters, and that opens new nodes of interaction. For the fourth and final book, Wilian ends up impeccably closing the characters, their journeys through history, and their transformations and, in a unique way, manages to return to the main theme of the story, giving it a closure that produces very intense emotions for him. The Melanie saga is a tetralogy that is structured with novel elements, classic archetypes, its own narrative style and a unique voice, working on a story as old as time itself, but developed with a honeyed voice, an acid critic, a deep love for the lyrics and a message that should not go unnoticed.