Writing

The Drafting Desk

This is where the stroy takes shape.

Not everything is meant to be seen.

A corkboard mounted on a matte, slate-colored wall is densely covered with overlapping index cards, red string connections, and small adhesive notes, all filled with meticulous, handwritten character traits and plot turns. A single card at the center reads “What is she hiding?” in bold ink. A slim, brushed-steel desk lamp casts a cone of warm, focused light from the upper right, leaving the room beyond in elegant darkness. This creates stark, cinematic contrasts and elongated string shadows that crisscross the board. Photographic realism with a slightly low, close-up angle and shallow depth of field draws attention to the central question card, evoking an analytical, suspenseful mood aligned with psychological storytelling.

Current Project

The Survivor

Book One of The Changed Series

A story about survival, transformation and what’s left when the world ends.

A corkboard mounted on a matte, slate-colored wall is densely covered with overlapping index cards, red string connections, and small adhesive notes, all filled with meticulous, handwritten character traits and plot turns. A single card at the center reads “What is she hiding?” in bold ink. A slim, brushed-steel desk lamp casts a cone of warm, focused light from the upper right, leaving the room beyond in elegant darkness. This creates stark, cinematic contrasts and elongated string shadows that crisscross the board. Photographic realism with a slightly low, close-up angle and shallow depth of field draws attention to the central question card, evoking an analytical, suspenseful mood aligned with psychological storytelling.

Some things are still unfinished.

Some things aren’t ready to be found yet.

Other Works

Not everything belongs to the same stroy.

Some pieces break off.

Some end before they should.

Some were never meant to be finished at all.

These are the ones that stayed.