Cover image
When the world begins again or ends — a name will vanish and be remembered.
If you can't read the name, try listening for it. Absence hates being noticed.
I am not here to close the story. I am here to keep it open.
If the story won't feed you, demand snacks as compensation.Gloam note, margin of chapter seventeen
The story survives in what is missing —
in the name that the tongue won't release,
in the shape of the grief still insisting
there is something to mourn, and then peace.
What kind of book is this
Genre
Meta-fictional fantasy. Cozy existential myth. A book where the fabric of the story is literally unravelling, and the universe's fate might depend on someone remembering to bring soup.
The vibe
Found family, reality-bending mysteries, slow-burn yearning, and humorous fourth-wall breaks — tempered with baked goods, snarky footnotes, and a grief so deep it has its own gravity.
Comp titles
The footnote-heavy wit of Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman's Good Omens, the cozy found-family warmth of Legends & Lattes, wrapped around a profound meditation on memory and what survives it.
What to expect
A note from the author
Where the Peace Returns is written. The Spiral completes. A release date will be announced when it's ready — sign up to the mailing list or follow along to be the first to know.
Content notes
Where the Peace Returns is the conclusion of the Fractured Spiral. The emotional stakes are high; the violence is not.
Violence
Very mild. The threats here are psychological and metaphysical rather than physical — creeping fogs, shattering mirrors, magic that unravels the world rather than bodies.
Death & grief
Heavy themes throughout. The emotional core of the book is the fear of being forgotten, mourning lost past lives, and sitting with absences shaped exactly like people. Death is treated as a metaphysical concept rather than a violent event.
Mental health
Moderate to high. Existential dread, derealization, and identity crises are central. Characters navigate memory loss, reality gaslighting — particularly in the Embercourt, where desire curdles into hollow hunger — and the terror of losing one's sense of self entirely.
Magic & horror
Creeping psychological horror. Reality warps. Doppelgangers appear. Absence — the entity that has haunted the series — consumes memories and leaves behind blank faces and scratched-out names.
Relationship content
Cozy, deeply emotional, and slow-burn. Multiple romances across m/f, m/m, and nb/f pairings — all focused on profound emotional intimacy, hand-holding, and kisses that have been a long time coming.
Notably absent
No explicit sexual content. Romance remains sweet, emotionally charged, and fade-to-black. No gore or visceral physical violence.