The Stories That Hit Different

Sci-fi. Horror. Grief. Chaos. Heart. These aren't just books. They’re universes, built to bleed into your screen.

Dead S.H.U.G.A.R.

Genre: Dystopian Horror · Sci-Fi · Dark Comedy

Joy turned lethal. Now the world is rotting in glitter.

In the year 2043, joy is deadly, sugar is synthetic, and America is a quarantined graveyard of its own making.

It started with a miracle. A new sweetener, NuGen Sweet 2.0, that didn’t spike insulin or rot your teeth. It worked. Until it didn’t. Corporations got greedy. Version 3.7, a so-called “nutritious” upgrade, bonded with the microplastics already inside our bodies and mutated into something worse: a synthetic parasite.

Children were the first to turn. They didn’t die. They changed. Sun-sensitive, hive-minded, and permanently glitter-dusted, they became consequences of capitalist excess. Screaming with pain, driven by instinct to infect others just for a moment of relief. Adults? They’re dying slower. Breaking down one memory, one muscle, one loved one at a time.

And in the chaos, America found a new scapegoat. Japan. Mass deportations emptied communities of anyone who America said was tied to the outbreak’s origin. Particularly those of Japanese descent. That’s where Toshi Takahashi comes in.

He’s the last Japanese-American teen left in the country, orphaned, silent, and carrying the only working cure. Hidden in the most ridiculous place imaginable: a Shrek DVD. His mother died researching the infection. His father was disappeared. Now Toshi doesn’t talk. Not because he can’t. But because it’s the only way he knows how to survive.

He doesn’t plan to lead. But he has no choice.

The Journey

Toshi is joined by a misfit group of survivors:

  • Harper – a spoiled rich girl who learns to swing a hammer harder than her comebacks.

  • Jared – a half-infected oracle child who can hear the hive and sometimes speak with the infected.

  • The Van – a sentient, bioflesh-covered, emotionally unstable vehicle designed by the same company that caused the outbreak. It cracks jokes, plays Limp Bizkit, and may or may not be harboring secrets of its own.

  • Reed and Marla – a bickering couple with tragic pasts and killer instincts.

  • Logan and Tasha – chaotic survivors with battle scars and axes to grind.

  • Raven Darkmoor – a delusional but oddly competent goth LARPer who refuses to break character. Ever.

  • Calder – a sniper with a death wish and a heart buried somewhere under six layers of sarcasm.

  • Quinn – a medic with a dark secret: he helped create NuGen.

Their mission? Survive long enough to reach a rumored safe zone, where S.H.U.G.A.R. operatives, survivors trained to eliminate infected, may hold the last functioning research facility. But getting there means crossing a wasteland crawling with infected children, black ops clean-up teams, and moral decisions no teenager should have to make.

The Twist

The infected aren’t just victims. They’re aware. They remember. They suffer. They feel everything. Especially the pain they inflict. There’s no satisfaction. Just the brief high of spreading the parasite, and the unbearable crash after.

As the group begins to bond, secrets unravel.

The van, once a source of comfort, is reprogrammed by the government to betray them.
Jared, the oracle child, feels the hive learning, adapting.
Toshi, silent for most of the story, finally breaks his silence when it matters most.
And Quinn? His secret destroys what little trust the group had left.

By the end, survival isn’t just about escaping the infected.
It’s about confronting grief, corporate betrayal, and the possibility that saving the world might cost everything they’ve come to care about.

The Tone and Structure

Dead S.H.U.G.A.R. is:

  • Complete at 95,000 words

  • Built for adaptation, with an ensemble cast and episodic arcs

  • Genre-bending – a mix of horror, sci-fi, satire, and gut-punch drama

  • Visually striking, filled with neon gore, glitter rot, and grotesque infected beauty

  • Emotionally resonant, centered on trauma, found family, and the resilience of memory

It’s Zombieland meets Black Mirror. With the emotional weight of Station Eleven and the teeth of Children of Men.

This isn’t just another apocalypse.
It’s the weaponization of happiness.
It’s about what happens when nostalgia turns fatal.
And it’s about the kids who inherited the end—and decided to fight anyway.

The Endless Wish Enigma

Genre: Dark Fantasy · Supernatural Horror · Psychological Drama

Three wishes. One girl. A family legacy twisted into legend.

It begins with warmth.
A sprawling, weathered house that’s been in Emily’s family for generations. A garden that feeds them. A lake that sustains them. A family of personalities as rich and messy as the soil they live off of:

  • Grandpa Chris, Emily’s playful, larger-than-life best friend and emotional anchor

  • Grandma Kathy, a former Catholic exorcist with quiet suspicions about the world beyond

  • Jane, Emily’s deeply religious, emotionally rigid mother

  • Uncle Joe, a practical, hard-edged survivalist

  • And a rotating crew of cousins, chaos, and tradition—all held together by one thing: love, even if it’s flawed

Emily is sharp-tongued, stubborn, and refuses to take orders from anyone… except Grandpa. His 1980s stories light up her world. He’s the only one who truly sees her.

Then one day, while fishing, she pulls a strange lamp from the lake.

The Door Opens

Inside the lamp is Anu—a genie, yes, but not the kind you wish for.

He’s a multiversal being, unbound by morality. He delights in beauty and death alike. A sunrise moves him. So does a scream. He’s not evil. He’s not good. He simply is. And he’s been waiting.

Emily’s first wishes are innocent. Sweet, even.

  • She wishes to visit the 1980s, just like Grandpa described

  • She wishes her family could be wealthy, to end their constant struggle

  • She wishes for joy, connection, something more

But nothing stays sweet for long.

Her mother condemns Anu as a demon. Her family begins to fracture. Tensions rise. Old resentments surface. And Emily, feeling more isolated with every breath, turns back to the lamp.

The Descent

Each new wish grows darker.

A punishment here. A disappearance there.
By the time she makes her third wish—to merge Grandpa with Anu—it’s already too late.

That wish opens a cosmic loophole. Now bound by blood and love, Anu is tethered to Emily permanently. There is no limit. There are no rules. She can now make infinite wishes.

And she does.

The family home becomes a palace.
Emily crowns herself Queen.
Dissenters are erased. Some are tortured. Others twisted into inhuman forms.
Time bends. Memories rot. The world reshapes itself around her every whim.

And yet… something is missing.
Because with each wish, Grandpa’s voice grows fainter.
Anu, now partially him, starts to feel—a side effect of human love poisoning a godlike force.

Emily must decide:
Undo it all?
Or stay in power, ruling a kingdom of ash, nostalgia, and horror?

The Loop

In the end, Emily makes her final wish: to reset everything.

To wipe the slate clean.
To forget.
To begin again.

And the book ends… exactly where it began.
Emily on her grandfather’s lap.
The lake still. The lamp not yet found.

But something’s… off.
A flicker. A familiar word. A knowing look from Grandpa.

Because you can reset time… but you can’t always erase what’s already changed.

The World and the Vision

The Endless Wish Enigma is:

  • A dark fantasy descent into corrupted innocence and power unchecked

  • Emotionally layered, rooted in family dynamics, generational trauma, and identity

  • Visually rich, with surreal dreamscapes, decaying timelines, and brutal horror imagery

  • Inspired by Coraline, The Witch, Pan’s Labyrinth, and Donnie Darko

  • Complete at 77,000 words, designed as a standalone story with thematic sequel potential

It’s a story about wishes, memory, power, and the cost of being seen. About how quickly childhood magic can turn into something monstrous. And how love—twisted, pure, or broken—always leaves a mark..

THE 14 MINUTES THAT LOVED ME BACK


Genre: Supernatural Romance / Psychological Drama / Speculative Fiction




Format: Novel (Volume One of a Two-Book Series) — With strong potential for television adaptation after publication

Tone: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind meets The OA, with the romantic ache of The Time Traveler’s Wife and the existential twists of Dark. A surreal, heartbreaking love story told through moments of death, memory, and reincarnation.


Naomi Moore was born into wealth. Her family, powerful, pristine, and utterly ruthless, owns half the skyline. But Naomi, the black sheep, has never wanted the silver platter. She’s the only one in her lineage who chose to work a real job, gardening, of all things. Quiet. Dirty. Unimportant by her family’s standards.


So they punish her the only way they know how: by arranging a marriage to a heir of another billionaire dynasty. A business merger disguised as a wedding. A cage in couture.


He is abusive behind closed doors.


Naomi hides the bruises under long sleeves and bitter smiles. The only light in her life is Julian, her gay best friend and coworker. Witty, fiercely loyal, and exiled from his own family for who he is. Together, they create a world of their own, full of glittered plant tools and inside jokes. But when Naomi finally decides to run, Julian doesn’t hesitate. He drives.


That night, everything ends.


A car crash on Maywood and 48th.

Julian dies instantly.

Naomi flatlines for exactly fourteen minutes.

And the man in the other car, Elian, is pronounced dead.


Except Naomi doesn’t stay dead.


She comes back.


But something comes back with her.


At first, it’s dreams. A golden sky. A clock that always reads 2:04. A voice. A figure just out of reach. Naomi tries to heal, to hide, to survive. But the dreams sharpen. The voice speaks her name. And then, Elian appears. Real. Physical. Somehow alive.


They have fourteen minutes.


Every night at 2:04 AM, Elian manifests, pulled to her by a cosmic tether forged when they both crossed over during the crash. Neither of them understand it at first, but the connection is undeniable. They’ve met before. In hundreds of versions of reality. Across lifetimes. Across timelines. Two souls magnetized by grief, love, and fate.


As they fall in love in the present, the past begins to bloom. Visions of prior lives spent together: saving each other, losing each other, promising to find each other again.


But the more Elian pushes to stay, the more the tether starts to break.


When Naomi tries to prove his existence to Cassidy, her best friend and Julian’s old confidant, it backfires. She’s forcibly institutionalized. Medicated. Treated like she’s delusional. Elian doesn’t appear the entire time.


Until the night before her release.


Through a dead, disconnected phone, he sends her a voice message:

“You had to go through this. So you’d know I was real.”


When she comes home, he returns. But something’s wrong.


His feet are gone.


The cost of reaching Cassidy shattered part of his form. Every visit, he’s less present. Fainter. Flickering. He begins to forget her. Every time they meet, Naomi has to remind him who she is. They fall in love again. Again. Again.


Eventually, only his head appears. So Naomi visits his realm instead. An otherworldly, dreamlike realm. But now she forgets. And he has to remind her.


Each meeting becomes a rediscovery. A first kiss. A first heartbreak. A first promise. Repeated through lifetimes like a song they’re both forgetting how to sing.


Until the truth comes out:


If Naomi stays too long in his realm, she’ll be trapped forever, melted into nonexistence. No reincarnation. No return.


He asks her to choose.


Stay and vanish with him.

Or leave.

Live.

Forget.


Naomi waits too long.


So Elian forces her to leave, severing the tether himself.


She never sees him again.


Even when she dies.

Even in the next life.

The connection is gone.


Years pass.


Naomi grows old, believing she lost him forever.


Until one day, the neighbor from the night Elian first visited her, Mrs. Adler, knocks on her door again.


Only this time, she tells Naomi the truth:


She’s from another timeline.

She went through the same thing.

And she found a way to cross timelines to be with her interdimensional love.

They had 70 years together before he died.

Now she’s just waiting to die… to find him again.


And she’s here to help Naomi do the same.


Volume Two begins with Naomi’s journey to find Elian again. Across time, death, and the infinite multiverse.


INFINITE!

Genre: Supernatural / Psychological sCI-fI

When a reclusive young man accidentally absorbs the power of an ancient cosmic force, he becomes the target of a shadow government and an alien species that wants its power back. With the help of his hilariously unfiltered AI sidekick, he must master his abilities, expose the truth, and prevent the collapse of all realities.



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NOVEL OVERVIEW: Infinite is a high-concept sci-fi action drama infused with philosophical depth, dark conspiracy, interdimensional lore, and offbeat humor. The series follows Evan. A former hermit turned cosmic powerhouse as he navigates a world unraveling under the weight of hidden agendas, alien intervention, and fractured universes.


Set in an alternate near-future Earth, the show explores how the sudden arrival of an alien-boosted cosmic force called "M63" changes the course of human evolution, politics, and reality itself.


Each Chapter expands the scope. From Earth-level conspiracies to multiversal implosion. Through it all, the emotional core remains centered on Evan’s evolution from isolation to leadership, and his bond with Robot Buddy, an AI constructed to keep him grounded, human, and sane.




CORE THEMES


Power & Responsibility: What happens when you gain the power of a god, but refuse to stop being human?


Truth vs Control: The war between the people’s right to know and the powers that hoard truth.


Identity & Duality: Evan vs his clone, creation vs destruction, and the blurred line between them.


Faith & Chaos: Even God appears, furious at Evan’s cosmic transgressions.


Hope in Absurdity: Through death, betrayal, and apocalypse, Robot Buddy provides comic relief and soul.





MAIN CHARACTERS


EVAN (28)

Once a socially anxious recluse, Evan is forced to evolve into a cosmic leader after absorbing the power of M63. By the end of Season One, he publicly exposes the shadow government, embraces his role as a hero, and confidently challenges the corrupted clone that holds the opposite half of his power.


ROBOT BUDDY

Evan’s self-made AI sidekick. Quirky, hilarious, blunt, and surprisingly emotional. Designed to keep Evan morally aligned and mentally grounded. Think K-2SO meets Deadpool, all with a touch of heart. (And yes, he survives the multiverse collapse.)


KYRA

Evan’s girlfriend, bold, witty, deeply loyal. She grounds him emotionally, and their relationship is tested by the massive shifts in power and reality. Eventually separated by dimensional boundaries.


AGENT CLARK

A government agent turned whistleblower. Initially attempts to kill Evan after explaining the truth of M63. His actions accidentally cause M63 to split.


EVAN’S CLONE (THE OPPOSITE)

A genetically perfect copy of Evan, created to house the destructive half of M63 after the original agent failed to contain it. Cold, methodical, and terrifyingly efficient.


GOD

A mysterious, rarely seen presence. Furious with Evan for collapsing the multiverse. Appears briefly to warn him of consequences and test his worth.




Quick Synopsis 


Evan’s quiet life with his family is disrupted by an earthquake that paralyzes his brother.


On a trip to visit his girlfriend, a comet crashes, it’s not a comet, but M63.


Evan touches it and becomes host to infinite power.


A secret agent reveals the truth: M63 is wanted by an ancient alien species (Mazekielites) from another dimension.


Government wants Evan captured. A clone is made to house the power’s opposite half.


Evan builds Robot Buddy to keep his morality intact.


The agent who botched the containment vanishes. The clone becomes a weapon.


The government starts a manhunt. Evan runs. Hides. Grows.


Trains in simulation rooms made from Agent Clark’s memories.


Exposes the truth about the government to the world.


Public reacts in awe, terror, division.


The clone is awakened.


The two finally battle.


The fight destabilizes reality. The multiverse collapses.


Evan floats in nothingness. Ready to surrender.


Robot Buddy appears. Offers one last reset.


Evan presses the button.




VOLUME TWO TEASE 


Evan wakes in a fantasy realm. Dragons, giants, orcs. Robot Buddy is inactive. The beings of this world fear a dragon they sacrifice to every 3,000 years. Evan sees something familiar in the dragon,  a shard of M63.


The new goal: survive this new world, reclaim the shard, and find a way back home.

.



WHY REPRESENT THIS?


Unique mythos blending cosmic sci-fi and grounded character drama


An emotional hero arc with both psychological and mythic stakes


Robot Buddy’s humor and humanity provide balance


Built-in season expansion (sci-fi to fantasy pivot)


The kind of high-concept, high-emotion content that Netflix, HBO, and Amazon have greenlit repeatedly




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STATUS Season One fully written in novel form. Completed manuscript available


Dream. Write. Panic. Repeat,

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Dream. Write. Panic. Repeat, 〰️