I Hope Someone Writes the Stories I Never Wrote

I have always been a constant daydreamer. As a result of my undiagnosed ADHD, my teachers would lecture in English but their words would soon transform into a strange language that acted as hypnotic spells. The words they wrote on chalkboards were symbols, sigils, and runes that unlocked visions in my brain. The brown lights of the overhead projector blasted my sight, through the corneas like a lighthouse calling me to Neverland. It was all part of a technological, psychedelic trance that induced me into a state of astral projection. 

I have visited so many worlds and I have lived more years in my mind than I could ever live on this physical meatspace. With so much surreal experience, I have tried my best to document them in the form of stories. Some of these are absolutely fantastic while others are recreations of my own life, filtered through my perception into a narrative epic. 

Yet, as much as I try, it is impossible for me to write all of these stories. Some of these projects trouble me with my inability to justify their fantastical nature to those readers with an acute eye for glitches in the literary Matrix. Other times, the desire and compulsion simply leave me as soon as I sit down. Regardless, these lost stories are sprites that I have failed to capture, free to return to the realm of ideas and possibilities. 

I hope that there is someone else out there that is able to catch all the things that I have missed in my net, willing to dissect the ideas and reconstruct them into writing. Words are a means to capture the visceral, intangible things that exist in the individual and collective imagination. Despite the lack of any true evidence of some sort of collective human spirit—either conscious, unconscious, or otherwise—the fact that phenomena like the Mandela effect exist even as fantastic coincidences mean that these ideas that we as humans consider *ours* are anything but. 

Like the prevalence of similar cuisines from different parts of the world, or the overlaps in spiritual culture, and maybe even considering the growing evidence of genetic memory—leads me to consider that the most primordial ideas are an inheritance bestowed upon the entirety of the human race. Maybe, this inheritance is extended to all mortal beings that may or may not exist.

In an age of Intellectual Property, where everyone thinks that they are entitled to the ideas that conjure from their minds, this might seem like a ludicrous statement. Digital assets are becoming more and more tangible thanks to the prevalence of mass computing and the rise of extended-reality technology. NFT and blockchain technology are making these ideas increasingly bound to the human concept of *real*. Our dreams are becoming reality. 

Yet, like nature, I don’t think dreams are always meant to be bound. Not completely. They are wild things, often confusing, frightening, and enigmatic. Even the most comprehensible and analyzed dreams retain a level of surreality that makes them, at least, in part, free from the human concept of ownership. I think that is a part of the appeal. 

Like petty gods, we fight over these concepts and ideas(see dreams) with our patents and trademarks. They are domains that we protect like entire demi-planes that we may mine for influence and power. We contribute to these spaces, giving them our time and focus. They influence us and our actions. They are digital, divine domains created by us.

The irony is that we fight over these exclusive rights to these dreams despite that mere contact with them has the potential to change our perspectives entirely. These ideas—like the uncaring nature of the universe—do not discriminate among those it incepts. As we interact with others both in meat and digital spaces, these ideas spread like viruses. 

However, I am not a god nor do I think I would like to be one. They say that the more powerful an individual feels, the less a human can feel empathy. They say that the part of their brains that should blaze with compassion in the face of another’s suffering becomes a small flicker to those drowned in a sea of control. 

I have no desire to fight over these dreams. I want filmmakers and dancers to use the music they find and treasure without fear of lawsuits. I want video essayists to create videos without the fear of getting their videos taken down, losing what could be their next month’s rent. I don’t want the characters of our pop culture kept behind a vault, only to be used exclusively by media empires as if they are exclusive agents in a psychic war over humanity’s collective heart. I don’t want to potentially break meaningless laws when I sing “Happy Birthday.” I want to make cool shit and not have to apologize for it. 

Much like the planet that we are constantly trying to terraform and bend to our will, our dreams seem to refuse our desire to be contained. Much like how our planet is fighting back with destructive weather patterns, our minds are fighting back our need to control with anxiety, depression, and fractured attention spans. 

Every day, people are making art in the form of memes, mixtapes, collages, and videos. I doubt most of these are “legal”. In that way, humans are pirates by nature. Long after humans are gone, the universe will still be here and so will the dreams and ideas we thought were so unique to us. My question is if other mortal races out there also quarrel over petty ownership? Or have they moved beyond it or never comprehended such a thing as “owning” an idea? Are they more focused on having a damn good time?

3. First Day pt.1

The following is part of a serialized story, Everyone Thinks I Dream of Chocolate. You can find the first chapter here.


I arrived for my first shift at the chocolate shop that Saturday. There wasn’t anyone around so I waited for a couple of minutes. Old Town was quiet but that wasn’t unusual. I had been there a couple of times with friends or on a date and the activity was always somewhat sparse. This was a part of the charm. It wasn’t busy like commercial malls with their sterile, reflective white with the garish lighting of individual stores reaching out to customers like specters trying to feed on your capital. It wasn’t crowded with families and teenagers in a sea of noises and bodies that overwhelmed. 

The floors were made of wood panels with a glossy finish. Despite the reflection of light from against the constantly clean floor, there were bits of dirt and dust, signs of natural age. The ceilings were high yet not obscenely so like a regular mall. The windowed ceiling let in natural light covering everything in an aura of warmth. The entire place was comfortable, cozy, and nostalgic. 

“Good, you’re here.” 

Dick walked in through the front. At 5ft 4in, Dick’s legs were short and skinny. Yet, he always stood with bent knees that slightly pointed out. It gave him a sturdy stance despite his slightly smaller build as if he was grounded in a way that was prepared for something. 

He tossed me an apron. It was burgundy—a color that along with teal, I was getting used to here. Lou’s name was scrawled in the same calligraphic elegance of her signs and business cards. I put it on, getting used to it like a new skin. 

“Ok let me walk you through everything. He went over how to use the cash register and various prices. 

“The machine calculates the tax but if it reboots, you have to set it up again yourself. You can find the instructions in that cabinet. Remember that if a customer asks for a ribbon, show them the wall and some of the boxes as well. If you can’t find the price, you can look at the price sheet by the register. If you still can’t find it, come ask me, then jot it down on the sheet for the next person. I have to remember to ask Lou to print out an updated sheet anyway.”

Dick listed off responsibilities and protocols as if he was reading them off a corkboard in his mind—one where all the notes were connected by strings of thread by the vaguest of logical connections. I tried to follow all of the threads but he also assured me that I didn’t need to learn everything in a single day. 

This was good because my mind drifted for about 30 seconds to the various items out on the tables. Lollipops made from chocolate in the shape of crabs and Natty-Boh guy. These chocolates were sprinkled with red dust that I realized was Maryland’s favorite seasoning, Old Bay. The prices of these items were marked on handwritten cards penned in a combination of markers and glitter pens. They gave small splashes of color to the store like sprinkles on ice cream. 

“…And if a customer asks for a bag, there are paper bags with handles down there. Oh and remember that if they ask for an ice cream cone, the price of wafer and waffle cones are different. It’s written on the chalkboard…” Dick continued. 

I looked around the shop. 

“What ice cream?” I asked.

“Oh, that’s right. Here follow me.”

We walked out of the shop. Ten steps later, I found myself in front of a cafe counter that wrapped around an enclosed area in the shape of an L. One end led directly into the kitchen while the other led to another glass case that held the ice cream.

I was almost taken by surprise because I had never seen anyone working these counters before and always assumed that they were closed for the day or indefinitely. There was glass, refrigerated case but I never saw any food in them and when I looked into the eating area, I never saw anyone sitting there. There wasn’t even a sign with the store’s name. 

“Wait, so you guys run both shops?” I asked.

“Yeah. Now, you’re going to have to keep an eye on both. Since it is Saturday, I will be in the back whenever there is a sandwich order, but Becky should be back any second. She went to deliver a sandwich to the art studio lady down the hall.”

“This place serves sandwiches?”

“Grilled cheese, yeah.”

Now that I had taken a closer look, however, I saw that there were some candies on the counter in glass jars. Behind the counter, there were more obvious signs of habitation. Facing the opposite wall was a cash register, napkins, containers with plastic utensils, and a soda machine. 

Then, I saw a girl walking down the hall carrying a small red cafeteria tray. She was about 5ft 2in, with straight brown hair tied in a ponytail. She had a pleasant face with round cheeks. Her stomach protruded, out of place with the rest of her build. It was somewhat masked by her apron. 

“There you are,” Dick said. “Becky, this is Mouse. He’s going to start today.”

“Nice to meet you.” She gave me a pleasant smile, which I needed. It was my first job out of college and I was a bit nervous. She had a calmer presence that balanced Dick’s intensity. We shook hands. 

“Ok great,” Dick said. “I still have several things to figure out in the back. Becky, help him figure things out while I get ready for the lunch rush.”

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2. My Resume Was A Sticky Note

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4. First Day pt.2

[Table of Contents]

I’m Over Dungeons and Dragons 5e (and the Culture Around It)

Everyone is arguing. If I had a stopwatch and actively counted the time, 30 minutes of our 3 hours of playtime would be recorded having spent negotiating the elements of a fictional reality. 

“How far is that? 150 ft? There is no way that they would be able to see that. Not in this weather.”

“It wouldn’t take that long to go to the next town over. So what if it is in the middle of an arctic environment?”

“I have never heard that you have to be standing still to ritual cast. I’ve done it plenty of times in Adventurer’s League.”

Play for 5 minutes. Stop. Play another 7 minutes. Stop. Play. Stop. Play. Stop. This was much of my last session with one of my Dungeons and Dragons parties.

How can I pay attention and stay engaged with these breaks in games flow? I can’t. So, I spend much of this session surfing the internet and doing anything else but pay attention. Role-playing games require a certain type of mind alteration. It is a hypnotic process, a self-induced vision based on the narrator and fellow players. It is a form of simulation, requiring commitment from everyone at the table. 

How can I do that when people are arguing? Choosing to pause the game to handle details that in my eyes are objectively unimportant. 

A couple of days later, I told my friend (a fellow player in the same game), that this last session truly highlighted for me much of my distaste for the wider Dungeons and Dragons culture.

“Yeah, but that’s the culture. Those are just things you accept.” 

His statement of acceptance enforced my point. 

Don’t miss read the title. I still love tabletop roleplaying games. If anything, these types of experiences have truly taught me what I value in them. I just don’t think I want to play much Dungeons and Dragons anymore. 

There are a lot of reasons for this. I can’t fathom dissecting every element of Dungeons and Dragons in one blog post. Perhaps, I can make this into some sort of ongoing series…

2. My Resume Was A Sticky Note

The following is part of a serialized story, Everyone Thinks I Dream of Chocolate. You can find the first chapter here.


I did actually bring a resume that day. It must have been a Wednesday. I was on my way back home from another interview when I thought about the Old Town Mall. Six months before, Chrissy and I were there on a date when we wandered into a chocolate shop. While I was still new to the area, Chrissy had grown up there and knew the place pretty well.

“They also have a shop in Main Street,” she said. 

“Oh. That’s pretty cool.”

“Yep, we’re still there!” 

A man popped out from behind us and walked into the shop. He was wearing a maroon apron that was caked in patches of dried chocolate. He was sweating pretty hard and he wiped it with a wet paper towel. 

“Do you guys know what you want?” The words came out with a hard tone, almost aggressive.

“Yeah, can I get some graham crackers and a couple of caramels?” I asked.

He nodded. As he packaged it all up for me, he asked, “Do either of you want a job, by any chance?”

It was quick. Chrissy and I looked at each other. We would be graduating at the end of the semester. Being Linguistics and English majors respectively, neither of us really knew what we were doing other than graduating.

“Not right now. Thanks though.”

“Damn it.” He rubbed his chin. “Do you guys happen to know anyone that wants a job?”

I thought about this, too. Most of my friends were pot-heads whose goals were to simply graduate and maybe then focus on whether or not they needed to find clean pee. 

“No, sorry.”

“Damn it. Well, worth a shot. If you find anyone.” He handed me a business card that read “Lou’s Truffles and Confectionary.” It had the same mint-teal background with a maroon red script that was on the sign hanging over the shop. The cardstock wasn’t the thickest but it had a glossy coat over it. It gleamed against the lights above us, cutting into my vision like an angelic sword. 

I thought about this as I was about to drive pass the Old Town Mall and decided to turn in. I had a spare resume with me, a habit I formed thanks to my parent’s badgering. I parked, walked into the mall, and went to Lou’s. The shop was lit by the smoky, glass pane. Sunlit shot through it and the glass filtered it into a smoother light that made the store glow rather than burn. 

The man from several months ago was there lying on his back next to one of the chocolate cases. He had a screwdriver in one hand and another in his mouth. He was talking to himself and if he didn’t have that screwdriver to filter and muffle the words, I could have sworn that it was every dirty word in the English language and at last several that he made up. 

“Hello,” I said. 

He looked up at me. 

“Can I help you?”

“Yeah. I was here a while ago and you asked if I wanted a job? Was wondering if that was still available.”

“Yeah. Oh yeah.” He got up. His tone had shifted from the battle-hardened mechanic to the chocolate salesman. 

“So, I don’t have much experience in retail,” I said as I passed him my resume, “But I do have customer servi…”

“Yeah,” he said as he took the paper and put it on one of the tables without so much of a glance. “Now, I need someone to work weekends, right now. Saturday. Sometimes Sunday. Maybe both depending on the week.”

“That’s fine. I need the money. As long as you give me a heads up, I’ll be there.”

“Ok. How about this Saturday, then? They are all 8-hour shifts.”

“Sure, see you then.”

“Sounds great. My name is Dick, by the way.”

“Mouse.”

He took down my name and number on a sticky note. When I returned back that same Saturday, I saw that my sticky note was laminated in scotch tape against the stainless steel tables. Later that day, I was taking out the trash when I a familiar, looking font peaking out of a folded piece of paper. I took a look out of curiosity and saw my resume, now stained in, dust and a mysterious smudge. 

As the first of 4 or 5 employees that would pass through the shop in the next couple of years, Dick always took down the same two pieces of information: name and phone number. Later, many local high schoolers would come up to me with a resume. It pained me as I thought about how much time they probably spent with their parents putting their resumes together, knowing how little of it anyone would see. Like Dick, I took down their name and phone number on a standard sticky note. 

Thinking of it now, the few people that did get hired after never brought a resume. The one guy who did became a sort of pariah and scapegoat. It was as if the sterility and pretentions that came with a resume, a document usually meant for a professional white-collar world, had no place here. 

At Lou’s, everyone was a part of the grind, expected to get a little dirty, for better and worst. It may have been imperative that the product and the shop have the shine of sugar-crystaled diamonds. Behind the scene, where the chocolate was made, it was expected that you were willing to be able to handle the grit. Despite its sweet disposition, chocolate was an unforgiving mistress. 

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1. I saw Lou for the first time since Covid…

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3. First Day pt.1

[Table of Contents]

All Stories Are Now Super Epic and It Has Ruined Me as a Writer

I have occasionally dabbled in lucid dreaming. At the peak of my interest, I was able to consistently become aware of the nature of this nocturnal hallucination. Unfortunately, I rarely gained agency of my own body, forced to view the events of the dream like a phantom that possessed another as a mere observer. On the occasions that I could gain access to my dream self’s body, I would wake up.
The one time, I was able to gain complete control, I was finally given the opportunity to ask the ultimate question that lucid dreamers want so desperately to be able to answer: What should I do now? 

In the heat of the moment, when anything was possible, I raised up my hands and tried to raise an entire city from the ground. I am disappointed to tell you that I woke up, embarrassed at the memory of how foolish I probably looked to whatever deities were looking into my mind through their cosmic windows. They were probably laughing at me and I can’t blame them. I would have done the same. 

Like most aspiring writers, the narrative scope is a temptation. There is a  desire to make our stories reach far and wide, to be able to express the vastness that is existence. Even the likes of the absolutely ordinary can become a sprawling epic in the hands of writers like James Joyce. There are so many tropes and ideas that can be used. Political ideology and philosophical concepts to draw upon. In many ways, this is the promise that writing offers storytellers, a chance to be uninhibited in their creations.

The digital age has created a trend in these larger stories. All of these new technologies that used to only be in the hands of large studios are available to the masses. There is still a cost of production but it has never been so accessible in the way it is now. I spent the entirety of last year chipping away at Homestuck, the web-comic epic that in my opinion, is one of the greatest works of literary fiction to ever be realized. It is ambitious in both narrative and physical construction, with over 8000 pages, consists of text, video, audio, and minigames. While the story is now owned by VIZ Media, it started off as a small passion project by author, Andrew Hussie, who just wanted to make silly stories in MS Paint. 

This year, I am making my way through One Piece in the hopes of being able to catch up before the mangaka finally ends his epic comic now over 1000 chapters and still going strong. So far, it is amazing. I can feel the progression of 14 years worth of writing as the story continues to get bigger and bigger.

The Marvel Cinematic Universe is the biggest example of the popularization of large stories. These are interconnected narratives with individual threads that ultimately connect to a universe expanding tales. They are full-on social events in themselves, creating a reason for people to commune, discuss, and celebrate their favorite stories. On the internet, you can’t go two-page clicks or scrolls in your media feed without some news about the MCU.

Yet, I think back to some of my favorite auteurs and their stories. Kurt Vonnegut, Quentin Tarintino. My favorite book to this day is still Fahrenheit 451. Despite its lean 46,118 word count, the story still hits me with the philosophical, social, political, and spiritual atom bomb that it always does. Every time I pick it up, the details of this literary blast become ever more clear to me. I can feel the individual ripples in the spiritual flames as it burns each moment into my soul like a welding torch. More of these ideas, previously hidden to me by naivety and inexperience, become revealed as I come to see these concepts in each individual atom of smoke. 

Many other stories have had this effect on me. Slaughterhouse-Five. Valis. Flowers for Algernon. Many of my favorite films as well. Pulp Fiction. Inception. The Iron Giant. These stories share a commonality in that they are self-contained. Regardless of scope (which can be regarding both physical and emotional depth), these stories feel complete by themselves. Some of these might be considered long as a singular experience but when compared to the likes of other mediums that are rooted in serial narratives, they are but a blink of an eye. 

While these writers will occasionally make small connections in their work, they still make sure to maintain a cohesive experience in their works. Tarintino has made several familial connections between various characters across his works. Vonnegut had a “fiction suit” through the likes of the fictional author, Kilgore Trout. Stephen King has the best of both worlds, tying many of his stories to the Dark Tower. 

Perhaps, this convergence in the global world through physical and digital spaces has not only allowed people to create larger and larger narratives but also made it something of an expectation. I wonder if the amount of worlds that we as humans have created is beyond that of what we have actually explored or is even possible to explore. 

It all ends up putting this pressure on me. I want to write these giants, epic tales. I want to explore hundreds of complex characters, each a small part of a Super-organism of a cast. I want to say grand things about the nature of existence. I want to project ideas on a macro and micro level, providing conclusions about everything and nothing. More than anything, I want to provide readers with a tool to help them live and die well.

It might seem silly to have this perspective but I don’t think I am the only one with these ideas. In fact, the writing group I had in college shared similar aspirations. This is the trap that I have set for myself in recent years. I have tried to constantly bite more than I can chew, swallow, and digest. It results in everything coming out like crap that’s either too dense to comprehend or barely put together. 

As I continue in any of my creative ventures, I am still going to aim high and set my sights beyond the heavens. I just don’t want to keep repeating these cycles of trying to create with reckless abandon, to attempt to create entire worlds from nothing without the experience of creating everything within it. Perhaps, the next time I awake in my own dreams, I will start creating smaller things first. A single skyscraper shouldn’t be too hard.  

1. I saw Lou for the first time since Covid…

The following is the 1st chapter of Everyone Thinks I Dream of Chocolate.


I actually came by the store the day before. It had been my first time in Main Street since the world closed down. It was the middle of July and most people were vaccinated or pretending to be vaccinated. I came down with Chrissy to grab some dinner. It was after 5 pm and I knew that no one would be at the chocolate store. Still, we walked up to the window and peeked inside. Despite the lights turned off, the summer sun was enough to illuminate the scene. 

Glass cases filled with trays. The left case had dipped confectionary. Oreos, graham crackers, and pretzels sat next to homemade peanut butter cups. In the right case were truffles. Each ceramic dish had a different flavor and topping to match. I instantly recognized the rose petals, candied oranges, cayenne pepper decorating the cubes of chocolate on the top shelf. It was like looking at a miniature garden of sweet delight. 

Over the entire shop was a sign, handcrafted and hand-painted. The sign itself was a pastel mint. The words “Lou’s Truffles and Confections” were scrawled with a deep maroon paint in an elegant script. It seemed to capture everything about the shop. Luxurious and humble, it presented the idea of “Lou’s” as that small town ideal. 

Perhaps, it was the lighting. The shadows and dying afternoon sunlight created the visual tones of an old sepia photograph. It was all so familiar to me. This was my life only a year and a half ago. Yet, it also felt so far away. 

“We can come back another time,” Chrissy said.

I nodded. 

We looked for a place to eat. A lot of the shops on Main Street were new. Businesses that were closed due to the pandemic and bankruptcy were replaced by new ones. I’m sure these new shops were feeling lucky as they gambled against the economy and natural disasters for profit. We decided to try one of these new restaurants: the Upper Floor. Their burgers were pretty good. It was balanced and juicy without being greasy. Yet, even as I stuffed my face with food and beer, I couldn’t help feeling this familiar anxiety. It had been gripping me since the start of the quarantine. 

Later that night, Chrissy and I stopped at a new smoke shop near the bottom end of the Street. I wanted to pick up some new vape parts. The guy said that he didn’t have them in and to come back tomorrow. 

The next day, a cashier said that the owner would be in with my parts in 15 minutes. 15 minutes to kill. Anxiety gripping my chest again. I had to pee. I asked if the cashier if there was a bathroom and of course there wasn’t. 

I found myself walking up the street toward the chocolate shop. The other shops had long since given up on enforcing masks (“if the government doesn’t care…”). Lou’s had a big sign, reminding people her shop still required a mask and had a four-person limit. I walked up to the door, put on my mask, and counted the people inside. Three. I counted again, just to be sure and once more for confidence. 

“How many people are inside?” 

I looked behind me to see two women in their 60’s, smiling eagerly at me. 

“With me, it will be four,” I said. 

Time stretched as I opened the door and walked in. For a moment, Lou looked at me. She stopped with a moment of questionable recognition, then went back to help a customer. Did she ignore me? No. I had a mask and sunglasses on. 

I got in line and waited for what seemed like another stretch of a very long minute. While I waited, I noticed a woman working behind the counter that I had never seen before. I saw the two of them in rhythm, helping the customers in front of me. They weaved in and out of each other, going into different nooks and crannies under the tables. They pulled out different-sized boxes to package the truffles. With the way they handled them so delicately, it was as if they were landscaping personal gardens made of chocolate. Again, this was all familiar to me but in the same way that people felt nostalgic for a time, they barely remembered. This all felt so far removed, a life so long ago the memory was but a dream. 

“Can I help the next person?” Lou said.

I walked up to her and took off my sunglasses. 

“Hey, Lou.”

“Hey, Mouse. How are ya?”

“Not bad. Good to see the old store still kicking.”

“Yep. It’s busy as always.”

“And the store at Old Town still going?”

“Yep. We’re pulling out of the Kitchen at the end of the month but we’re going to start making chocolate here.”

“That’s great. I’m sure Dick is happy about that.”

“Oh absolutely. And we still have Sandy and Jabari. Christian is still around every once in a while. We also have a new boy named David over there and Dana over here.

“Hi,” said Dana. She has her back turned, focusing on wrapping a ribbon around a newly packaged box. 

“Hi,” I said back.

“So how have you been,” Lou asked.

“You know, mostly focusing on myself. Trying to figure stuff out. Just came out to say hi.”

“Well, we all need to do that sometimes. You look good.”

“Thanks. Well, you’re busy so I’ll leave you to it.”

“Alright. Thanks for stopping by.”

I walked out the door and passed the two women waiting behind me.

“Well, that was quick,” one of them said.

“Yeah.”

Her tone was cordial enough but I also knew Lou. She wasn’t going to flip out in front of a customer. Not immediately, anyway. Maybe, she wasn’t mad at me. After all, my mind was predisposed to a mild case of social paranoia. 

There was a sense of distance in her tone, however. It was enough to know that at the very least, my time at “Lou’s” had come to an end. 

As I walked back to the smoke shop, I thought about the store in Old Town. That was where I mostly worked. I think about Dick and the fact that if I didn’t visit him soon, the same sense of anxiety would keep building inside me. A part of me wanted to run, however. To never see them again and pretend my time at Lou’s Truffles and Confectionary had been nothing more than a vague dream…

Next
2. My Resume Was A Sticky Note

[Table of Contents]

Everyone Thinks I Dream of Chocolate

The following was originally published by Grubstreet Literary Magazine in 2019(print) and 2021(online).


    Two glass cases on each side of a wooden table. In one case, thirty different varieties of truffles, each hand cut from a thick slab of ganache, then dipped in a hard-shell chocolate. Dark belgian, bourbon, rum, Jack Daniels sit on the top shelf. Below them, floral flavors like lavender and jasmine are placed alongside more savory ones like Old Bay and cayenne. Each of them is cupped in a unique color. Beyond the glass lies a land where truffles seem to bloom from paper petals.

        I am Willy Wonka in a world of pure imagination.

        A woman walks into the shop.

        “Hello.”

        “Hello.”

        Retail workers use some variation of these greetings to engage customers. In an attempt to break through social barriers, we’re supposed to greet people with a bright personality to disarm paranoia.  I am bad at this: socializing. If I was good at it, I would comment on her necklace, a triangle coated with the black steel edges shimmering under the warm flood lights. Or perhaps I would say something about the state of affairs in this nation of God, guns, and beer. But I don’t know if I believe in God. I don’t know if this lady likes beer. I’m pretty neutral about guns, but that’s a bit much to talk about after only exchanging two words.

        Paranoia, it’s not something you think you would find in a chocolate store, but it is everywhere. I see it in the faces of those walking in. It doesn’t matter the smile one wears, the faces painted with makeup bright and pretty, or the store’s decorations. Hearts, streamers, seasonal displays, glass art, and photos do little to distract from the fact that two people meeting is the equivalent of two universes colliding. Words exchanged are metaphysical. They are capable of creating and destroying, loving and hurting, influencing, forging:  

        Consciousness.

        A silence pervades as she observes my creations in the other glass case: the dipped confectionaries. Oreos, Twinkies, marshmallows, pretzels, and graham crackers share a rack. Barks with different types of nuts and dried fruits. I often forget that I have a hand in the creation of every single piece of chocolate.

        “How much is that one?” She sticks her pointer finger on the glass. I think about the fact that I have to clean up the smudges, coughs, and spit that hits this glass everyday. Who knows where these people have been? Who knows what they have touched? As someone living in a country unapologetic about free online porn, I hope everyday that these people wash their hands.

        “$4.19, with tax,” I say.

        I take her five-dollar bill to the small treasure trove entrusted to everyone who works here. Like a praying mantis, I strike the mechanical keys hard and quick with my fingers. The machine spits the cash out. A metal tongue springs out and screams like a robot, screeching as I pull the change out.

        “Thank you.”

        She smiles as she leaves. I smile back but as soon as she turns away, the edges of my mouth drop. Smiling makes me tired.

        I look at the tip jar. It’s pretty empty today. There is a fiver in there, but Chris made that.

        “You just have to be a flirt,” he would say. “Get on their good side. Drop them some compliments. Remind them that you are sexy.”

        I get what he means. After all, we are essentially prostitutes. Only difference is that we give people chocolates instead of our bodies. We all give our bodies to time, and no matter who you are, we are all running out of it.

        Time is the most valuable currency, yet it’s money that makes the world go around.

        “Your problem is that you are just yourself when you sell.”

        “What’s wrong with being me?”

        “Nothing. But when you’re with customers, you have to be a different you.”

        Chris started this job later than me, but he has always excelled as a salesman. I don’t know how to tell him that I find customer service disturbing. I see it when I go into stores myself. Some workers are base-level polite. Others try suppressing that they are having a bad day, doing a really bad job. I feel for these guys. I know what it is like being in one place for eight hours, doing something a robot can do better.  

        It’s the people smiling at me, with a genuine atmosphere, asking me how I’m doing, with sincerity and joy: these are the workers that worry me. I wonder if these greeters, these optimists, behind the sweet smiles and laughs of  soda-pop crackle, dream of a world where everything is on fire. In a developed society where we have built monoliths and temples celebrating our triumphs, do they wish for flames to bloom wherever they step? Do they watch the pedestrians run around, their hair drenched in orange plasma, with embers dripping from the tops of their heads? Do they comment on how they look like little match people, carrying a torch, a life force? In their dreams, are they  all crying and laughing at both the terror and absurdity of this arduous rise and split-second fall?

        I hope so because if not, what are they so happy about?

        “Mouse!” my boss yells from the back. I walk to his office. Its tiny closet stuffed with a desk, a cabinet, a safe, and a bunch of miscellaneous tools and documents cluttering the space. If there is a method to this madness, then my boss is a method man, missing nothing when it comes to his true craft: the art of making money.

        “Your s’mores are cracking, again. I told you to pull them out as soon as the chocolate sets or the change in temperature is going to fuck it all up.”

        “Sorry.”

        My stomach lurches. Do I still have my job? This question always resurfaces when I tend to make mistakes. Since I make a lot of them, the danger of unemployment seems all the more prominent. 

        “I need you to make some turtles.”

        “Ok.”

        For the moment, I’m still employed.

        I get a plastic bowl, fill it with imported chocolate chips, heat it in the microwave at four and a half minutes at half power. While it heats up, I prepare the materials: a scrapper, molds, and a funnel gun. Once the microwave rings, I will take the melted chocolate, pour the molten cocoa into the molds, then pour the chocolate back into the bowl. With a thick chocolate coating in the mold, I will chill the plastic for a couple minutes. Then, I’ll fill the molds with a mixture of caramel and pecans. After, I’ll use a funnel gun and fill up the top up with one more layer of chocolate, sealing and encasing the mixture. Finally, I’ll stick the molds in the fridge again for about half an hour. When I pull them out, I’ll turn the molds upside down and give birth to candy turtles.

        I wonder if it was this easy for God to make us.

        My body is automated when I cook. Most of the steps involve microwaving something, filling something, cutting something, or timing something. With some practice, it has become muscle memory. A trance state takes over. My body is running a program entitled .makechocolates and its function speaks for itself.

        It allows my mind to wander. Or rather, for me to wander through my mind. Like a simulation, my brain crafts entire worlds, recreating sights, smells, and sounds. As if I myself am in a state of superposition, my body automates itself in the world of what is while my consciousness explores the worlds of what could be.

        Through this, I have experienced a thousand lifetimes.

        I am in an interview. There is a crowd around me, a camera staring me down. I see my reflection within the glass lens.

        “How does it feel to have both solved world hunger and world peace at the same time through your new book Do Better?

        “I can tell you that it is finally a relief that people will get their hands on it. I honestly feel that it is a culmination of my life philosophy and work, something I can instill upon the people, that they can use it to better their lives long after I pass.”

        The lights shine on me, a bright white with a tinge of yellow, flooding this space. In real life, this would make me sweat. I sweat a lot. But here, in this world that my mind has crafted just for me, the lights feel warm. I feel comfortable.

        “And I hear there is a Netflix movie on the way as well?”

        “I can tell you that it is currently in pre-production and that casting is supposed to start within the coming months.”

        The crowd screams at that, and I smile in recognition. I even throw a wave. This is what it is all about: pleasing the people. I feed off their happiness and drink it like ambrosia, nectar, elixir. It is an energy beyond what Tesla could have ever imagined. All it takes is the joy of a single person submitting their emotions to me. 

        Someone is walking by. It’s common practice to say hello to potential customers passing by the shop. Chris beats me to it of course.

        “Hello,” he says. His voice is bright and colorful. The customer returns his affectionate greeting. Then they turn to me, expecting me to top it. I won’t be able to. If I pretended to, it wouldn’t be honest. I give the person a nod and a smile, the best I can muster. She smiles and nods.

        How many people  pass by every day? My guess is, on some days, hundreds. They all carry their own thoughts, each one so similar yet so different from mine. 

        Someone once told me that if aliens of a higher consciousness were to visit Earth, they would see us the same way that humans see ants: indistinguishable from one another, bugs in our simplicity and worth. To me, however, we are all a case study for the multiplicity and infinite combinations of the human experience. Does that make me enlightened or utterly foolish?

        “Hey, Mouse.”

        I look up to see Tera, a security guard. Every day, she makes her rounds and passes by the store once every hour. Her ritual helps mark the time.

        “Hey.” I toss her a nod. She smiles before looking forward and walking off past the bubble tea kiosk and into the south wing, then turns the corner. I always greet her during her first round. The other seven times I either just nod or don’t look up at all, pretending I’m too invested in my work. But really, I always watch her pass by. I used to save face by turning around and pretending I need to get something from the kitchen. But lately, I’ve been caring less and less. Especially, after she got…

        “Engaged, Mouse,” Chris reminds me. “You saw that rock on her finger, right?”

        Perceptive as ever, he manages to sneak his way into my story, using his words like a stealthy rogue to find a spot in my narrative.

        “I know.”

        It’s times like this when I both love Chris and am fully suspicious of him. Unlike me, Chris knows how to socialize. Not only does he excel at it, but he is fully aware of his ability. This sort of self-realization, understanding the social world, knowing the unwritten rules, being able to wield the power to sway the emotions and thoughts of those who cross his path: that is a power more dangerous than any weapon. After all, it is men such as he that can convince generals how they should use the big red button triggering Armageddon.

        He smiles, letting me know he understands how I feel. He never says these things directly. It’s all in the look, the unspoken, the real-life subtext. I know he means well. So why do I think the worst of him? I both admire and fear this man and I wish I had the gall to choose one over the other.

        He goes to help another customer while I continue making the turtles. It takes a second to get into the motions. I crush the pecans into crumbs that fall into a bowl of caramel. I mash the mixture with my hands. I take small globs of the new concoction and start filling the chocolate-coated molds.

        Then, I am sitting next to Tera. The scenery keeps shifting because, really, this conversation could be held anywhere: beaches with setting suns, rainy streets tinted grey by stormy clouds accompanied by coffee shop jazz, black and white scenes from old movies where the orchestral soundtrack is as real as the foggy breathe that lingers in cold city streets.

        I am Tera. I am these many worlds. Most of all, I am myself, the star of this play crafted just for me. As real as it all seems to me, I know that it’s all pretend, based on fantasies and predictions. I glean all her possible thoughts and my dreams to create these stories about us.

        “How many times, Mouse?” she says to me. “How many times are we going to rehearse this scene?”

        “As many times as it takes,” I say.

        “It’s not like I’m even the first one.”

        “You’re right. I have been in these scenarios thousands of times with plenty of other girls.”

        “Many come and go. Do they ever come back?”

        “Oh yeah. Some more frequently than others. A lot of them show up after years of absence. But they always return here.”

        “You fall in love that easily?”

        “Yeah. It’s pretty tedious, but these feelings are as true to me as anything else I understand.”

        We are under the ocean, walking through Atlantis. Within the ruins, we watch leviathans swim among the whales, the sharks, the minnows, and plankton. Even though we are at the deepest depths of the ocean, sunlight still reaches this place and the water is warm. Gravity does not seem to affect us as we walk. Only our hair sways to and fro with the tides of the sea.

        “Are you happy?” I ask.

        “As far as we know, of course.”

        “You do seem to be smiling a lot these days. Chris has mentioned it too.”

        “Do you think he knows about our time together? In here?”

        “I wouldn’t be surprised. He’s sharp as ever.”

        We walk through a forest where the tree leaves are shifting back and forth between fall and spring, cycling between orange, yellow, and red to the many shades of green. Through this fractal forest, we smile at each other, both heartfelt and melancholic. We never touch each other, not even to hold hands. This is the closest I will ever be to her. 

I am constantly rehearsing for a play I will never put on.

        “Will you ever forget me?” she asks.

        “Never. But I hope to God that you, the real you, forgets me.”     

        “Can I get some help please?”

        I look up to see Fred, a fifty-something-year-old desk jockey too dumb to realize that job is riding him harder than he could ever know. Always working at his desk, typing away or on a phone call. Once a week, he walks here from his shop to get some chocolates for his wife. His voice is high pitched, with squeaks and squawks, as if castrated from years of desk-job labor. 

        “Can I get a box of twenty-four assorted truffles, please?”

        “Sure.”

        “None of the alcohol ones please.”

        “Sure.”

        “And can I get a ribbon on that?”

        I don’t want to do a damn ribbon. Out of all of the things to do in the shop, it is my worst skill. It is a free service that takes extra effort and it tends to hold up the line.

        “Of course.”

        I finish putting the truffles together and close the box. Guy picks a red one.

        “Can I get a fatter ribbon?”

        I already cut a piece of the thinner ribbon from the spool. I know that he isn’t doing this on purpose, but it’s almost worse that way.

        “Yeah, no problem.”

        I cut the new piece and I start tying the bow around the box. From the corner of my mind, I get a feeling. Everyone who works at the mall gets a discount if they shop at any of the other stores, a consolation prize for sacrificing a third of your day that could be spent living or sleeping. Fred mentions it every time, as if it’s his first time shopping here. I don’t know if I can handle that today. 

        “And I work upstairs, so don’t forget my discount.”

        Why am I so agitated? None of this matters. We don’t matter. I don’t matter.

        But if that is the case, then why do I care so much?

        “Sure.”

        He hands me a credit card. I stick it into the chip reader and wait. Our credit card machine uses an old landline that the mall still has in service. The price for stolen internet is that it runs like we’re still in the ‘90s. There is a long silence as I wait for the machine to spit out the white paper.

        “Thank you. Have a nice day.”

        I turn away. Please go away, Fred. If you value me as a human being, an individual with feelings, please go away.

        “And this final price is with my discount, right?”

I am fire, alchemized by hatred. I brush across the forests in wide strokes, painting the wood like a canvas. My reach is ever-creeping towards civilizations. As I blacken and char all that I touch, turning the living into the dead, I am a force that forever changes. I am a thousand people being burned to ashes, lighting brilliantly like fireworks, just as jubilant because this is a celebration. This rapture within this world I simulate is the result of one man who could have saved it. I like to imagine that he stands as the last man. He watches from a mountaintop as the world is swallowed by the phoenix before being reborn as ash. There, he awaits his own fate, the same as everything else. To watch his new world unfold and to know that he is the reason, one must imagine Fred unhappy. 

        “Yes.”

        “Ok, have a good one.”

        He walks out of the store. Chris walks over to me.

        “You ok? You looked pretty angry.”

        “I’m fine.”

        “Be careful. People aren’t very good at hiding their emotions.”

        I wonder how much Fred knew. I don’t think he picked up on it. If he did, he didn’t even know the half of it.

        I go back to making chocolates. Again, I get lost in the rhythm. I just let my body do what it does, but my mind is still in ashes.

        “You’re really good at this.” I look up to see a woman. How long has she been standing there?

        “Thanks,” I say. “Would you like some help?”

        “No, I’m good. I just like to watch.”

        I keep going for a while. I forget that she is there until I finish the tray and look up to see that she has watched me all this time, like a pedestrian who stumbled upon the beginning of a street-performing act and decided to watch until the end.

        “You know, it is amazing to be able to watch someone so passionate about their work make their art.”

        I never say anything back to her. Instead, I look around the shop. Everything, from the truffles, dipped confectionaries, the molds: I have had a part in all of this. A part of me is put into each of these pieces of candy. A part of me is in everything here. This is my world. It makes me feel simultaneously so big, yet infinitely small. I am a master and slave to this realm. I create only to have my work taken from me. I produce children that I have no attachments to.

        She waves goodbye and walks on until she gets lost in the crowd, becoming a part of the giant web of thoughts that exists within the collective human experience. I wonder who will be the next proxy to emerge from the entity, what combination of aspects, traits, and archetypes that will walk past the shop next.

        It’s four o’clock, two hours until closing.

        I go back to dipping. Like a film, I fade in and out between my real-life television show and the strange commercials where I can dream, if only for a moment.  

A Touch of Madness

This story was originally written in 2015 and won the Bartleby Literary Magazine’s Micro-Fiction Contest.

While it is an earlier work that in many ways I have outgrown, I still see it as a stepping stone in my writing accomplishments. I hope you find some merit in it as well.


The star of today’s matinee is a boy in a grey corduroy uniform. His bruising knuckles are shining on like a crazy purple diamond. Decorated in acrylic red, blood continues to spout from the recesses of the cracking skin. The setting of today’s play is a classroom of silent voyeurs comprising students and a teacher. At center stage, little Robert is enjoying his moment of violence as he beats the shit out of his Big Bully, Stephen. 

Of course, this senseless violence wasn’t unprovoked. This week had been a particularly stressful one for Robert. Stephen had decided that as a birthday present, he would make sure to publicly humiliate Robert every chance he had, a reasonable punishment for being another year older. 

In his moment of stress relief, Robert starts to remember the time he found out that his Aunt Beatrice died. From his bedroom, he heard his father crying in the kitchen. It was the first time he had heard the sounds of sadness since crying was deemed an illegal act long before his time.

He is reminded of his academy days when free time was moved inside due to yearlong cleaning maintenance on the main streets that forced the children indoors. Robert realizes at that moment that it was probably a cover-up by the city so they could control the riots that no longer raged the streets. 

A year later, his brother went off on the annual war. The papers said it was going to be quick and finished in a month. Today, Robert’s family is still waiting for their firstborn son to come home. 

Oh and we forgot to mention: at this precise moment that little Robert decides to go animalistic, an invisible force of cosmic proportion decides to place a finger upon Robert’s head. This force of nothing and everything pours knowledge into the reservoirs of his brain cavity, filling the well with answers equal to 42. It’s driving Robert mad.

Yes, right now, Robert is feeling pretty down. It’s a good thing that he is still relieving stress through the little sack boy. His fists continue to pump into the flesh. The blood from Stephen’s face and Robert’s knuckles start to mix. Robert can see now why his father had cried that day. He wants to do it at this moment but years of social conditioning are getting in the way.

Then, the landscape of his memories starts to terraform into a vision. 

Robert sees that within a few years, he would eventually go off to fight his own war. He would come home to marry Susan who currently sits two classrooms away from his own. After their fifth child, they would escape to the countryside as the government would be tracking down families who break the Population Control Act. His children would get used to enjoying life in the countryside. Robert would come to appreciate the hills and how they seemed to stare along with him as he watched the setting sun slowly extinguish below the valley.

Three years after, the government dogs would find his family. His wife would “disappear.” His children would be given over to the state. Eventually, he would be locked up in the state prison. That same year, the Department of Education would file for bankruptcy, forcing millions of young students on the streets. He would die in prison two years later.  

Then, Robert saw his fourth son, Cecil. By this time, all of Cecil’s siblings will have died. Seeing as he will be a mediocre, slightly above average, plus one to the population, Cecil will be sent to a children’s camp. He will be punished for producing the least results. He will be shunned by his peers. He will suffer. 

But something inside him will spark in his moment of defeat, the desire to see his world on fire with the streets basking in an orange glow. People will cry and laugh until they are out of tears in their ducts and air in their lungs. He will smile at the festivities of reincarnation as the citizens march screaming “We Did It! We Are Humans Once Again!” For the first time in forever, they will feel happy. 

As little Robert continues to beat his victim, he starts to crack a smile as tears flood from his eyes. The world is terrible. The world is beautiful.

Happy Birthday, Robert.

Daniel Plainview: Voice and Power

SPOILER WARNING

This is a character analysis of the character, Daniel Plainview, from the film, There Will Be Blood (2007). It can be watched on Netflix at the time of this articles release.


Daniel Plainview’s greatest power comes from his voice. His ability to weave convincing words with a drawl emulates the thick, black oil that he uses to charms his victims. In fact, I would argue that one of the main selling points in There Will Be Blood is located in the sound as much as the sights. This is notable in that his opposite, Eli Sunday, is a preacher, a role that also requires one to use his voice and charisma as a spiritual weapon. Both are using it throughout the story in their battle over the souls of the townsfolk. 

At the beginning of the story, Daniel’s son, H.W, plays the role of a good child. He, like the rest of the town, is also entranced by his father’s words. Often, his good relationship with his father is used to Daniel’s benefit. The image of a family man is a part of the smoke and mirrors that he uses to convince people to act as he desires. 

Yet, a big turning point for the story is when H.W. permanently loses his hearing in an oil rig explosion. I think it is fitting that H.W. loses his hearing this way. After all, he has spent much time prior to this by his father’s side in the thick of the business. He watches and learns from his father, and often called Daniel’s “business partner.” It can come across as playful, innocent banter, but knowing Daniel’s personality as a ruthless Capitalists alludes to how a small part of him genuinely views his son on those terms. 

We see the father and son struggle in their relationship H.W’s accident with Daniel speaking to him and receiving no acknowledgment or recognition of understanding from his son. Eventually, Daniel abandons H.W. at a school for the deaf, only to bring him back (along with a deaf teacher) in order to spite some business partners who he perceived insulted him for his parenting.

However, the once familial bond between the two is now lost. The pair spend the next decade purely as business partners. While H.W. growing up seemingly as a well-adjusted young man and learning to adapt to his deafness, Daniel slowly descends into madness, his humanity slowly being stripped away. In one of the last moments of the film, H.W. leaves Daniel’s practice to start his own, with Daniel responding by disowning and belittling him. 

Despite knowing that Daniel Plainview is not a sympathetic protagonist, I am empathetic in that I think his inability to communicate with his son had a disastrous blow on his conscience. The early scenes with them together seem genuine, with Daniel proud of his son for the small victories that he contributes to the family business. When Daniel pulls his son out of the wreckage of the explosion, Daniel is genuinely distraught in a way that a father cannot hide when a child is in danger. His frustrations later when he screams at his son, begging for acknowledgment from a son that can no longer hear also rings true to me. When H.W. returns from the deaf school, Daniel attempts to rebuild that familial bond with hugs and a steak. 

The problem is that despite Daniel’s attempts to be genuine with his son, H.W.’s loss of hearing means that he is the only character in the film that becomes immune to his father’s ability to seduce, hypnotize, and manipulate. He is able to see that his father is not the family man that he makes himself out to be, but a selfish deceiver who spins his most favorable truth to gain what he wants. When H.W. comes back from the deaf school, he does not hug his father, even superficially, but attacks him. 

Over time, we see that while H.W. gains his own ability to express himself through sign language, Daniel does not make the attempt to learn this new language. I believe that he is so rooted in his ability to control people in his spoken language, that the thought of losing that control by speaking in a visual language dissuades him from doing so. 

In their final conversation at the end of the film, they must use Daniel’s teacher as an interpreter. This teacher acts as a filter of sorts, with Daniel no longer able to conceal his intentions through his voice and words. The animal that Daniel has mentioned and revealed on occasion, that he has spent so much time trying to conceal either for his son or for his business, is fully unveiled. 

I think the saddest part about this scene is that Daniel denounces H.W, revealing that they are not related and Daniel only used him for the image of the family man as a part of his grand deception. Is this the plain truth? Or is this a simple deflection of as a way to protect himself from the pain of losing the only person that he had a genuine relationship with? I think in the web of deception, in all the confusing feelings that Daniel has created through the disconnect between his words and actions, the truth is lost in the snake oil.

A Greater Monster (2013) Book Review

This is a review of A Greater Monster by David David Katz.


A Greater Monster is an experience that I was really looking forward to. As a fan of Homestuck and House of Leaves, I am always looking for reading experiences that go beyond the traditional prose of the literary world. I like the idea that storytelling standards can be uprooted, especially if it means that these new mechanics can further immerse the reader into the specific themes of the story. 

Yet, when I read A Greater Monster, I did not get the same satisfaction that I got from the previously mentioned works. It ultimately feels too loose. It feels like a grand experiment that ultimately doesn’t come off as satisfying as the writer is too caught up in the concept that it forgets the fundamentals of what makes a great story. 

The story, or what I can understand of it, is about a nameless protagonist who works at a job that they hate. This protagonist is a misogynistic and cynical individual. They end up taking a mysterious drug from a homeless and man and transports the narrator into a strange world. Here, he spends the rest of the story traveling through this psychedelic, nightmarish Wonderland. 

There is a lot happening in this book but I can’t say I always know what is happening. A good middle third of the story has the perspective shift from character to character and I am not sure I even know who these characters are. I feel as if I am meeting them as the primary character but also I can’t be too sure. Many of the characters are given fantastical descriptions but they are also given such a hodgepodge of details that it ends up being hard to track all of these fantastical characters we meet. 

The tone is all over the place as well. Sometimes it can be downright funny and other times it can become an outright nightmare. Sometimes it seems to have some sort of plot and other times it becomes a psychedelic rant about the way our world is a false reality. 

All of the hallmarks of what I want out of an ergodic novel are here. Experimentations with text, including, font, size, style. There is a hundred-page comic sequence depicted on a black page. There are words that are depicted in shapes as opposed to typical lines. There are changes in tense and point of view. In many ways, I should really enjoy this. 

But the fact is I don’t. A Greater Monster tries very hard to make the concept work that it forgets the foundations of what makes a good story. I don’t like the prose. It is ugly and sometimes even immature. The main character is unlikeable. This isn’t usually a problem for me but it has the trappings of an “edgy” writer. This on top of the highly experimental style makes for a deadly combination that at worst feels embarrassing. 

If I had to pinpoint a diagnosis when compared to other ergodic works, I would say that those other works did a great job using more of the conventions of traditional works before throwing the reader into their experimental unknown. Katzman doesn’t do that here. It is unapologetic from start to finish that this experience is a psychedelic, apocalyptic nightmare. 

I have such a hard time getting my views out of this because reading the book really feels like taking bad drugs at times. It might sound like I am being sarcastic but I mean this genuinely. As a simulation of that experience, I guess this is good. For those of you that want that, I think you actually might have a good time with this novel. In fact, a lot of people reviewing this seemed to enjoy it. I’m glad they got something out of it. After all, I think if A Greater Monster has anything going for it, it is ambitious. It is unapologetically itself and I can honestly say that I haven’t read anything like it in quite some time. 

I would say that if this interests you, give it a read. If you can’t get past the first 50 pages, I can’t blame you. If you read it from start to finish in a single session, I can’t blame you either.