Published Works
On Writing & Attention

Writing Craft · Bestseller
The practice that transforms writing from struggle to flow. How to access the deeper currents of creativity that run beneath conscious thought. Not about writing faster or producing more — it's about the shift in the quality of attention when the body finds a rhythm and the mind follows the body down.
Buy on AmazonFiction & Poetry

Literary Fiction
Moony Adams knows seventeen ways to kill a man — or thinks he does. The trust fund heir can't tell if his expensive childhood training was preparation for intelligence work or just the paranoid extravagance of wealth.
Buy on Amazon
YA Science Fiction
Mott Fortress fixes things. As a maintenance worker aboard the generation ship IHC-111, she's spent her life keeping the machinery running while humanity slowly crawls toward distant stars. But when her boyfriend cancels their romantic getaway, she stumbles into a conspiracy that goes back to the ship's founding.
Buy on Amazon
Prose Poetry
A genius keeps finding his pants in trees. In thirty-four connected vignettes, an aging widower — brilliant, bereft, increasingly unmoored — pursues his wayward trousers through landscapes that shift between the quotidian and the metaphysical.
Buy on AmazonCollaborative Work

Co-written with Davo Roe as Harlan Hunt · Power of the All-Mind Saga, Book 1
The city of Apollonia gleams with the promise of unlimited energy. Euphonium powers everything. When John, ex-soldier turned Cold Synthesis engineer, survives an accident that kills two colleagues, he can't shake the feeling that something is deeply wrong with their utopian energy source.
Buy on AmazonComing 2026
In a space station where reality is gamified, a conversational app developer discovers the governing AI is playing a game of its own.
I write a weekly newsletter called TMMW about the practice of making meaningful work in a commodified age. Essays on freewriting, attention, craft, and the nervous system.
Read on SubstackTMMW
To Map, Must Walk.
The map is the finished work — what emerges after you've walked the territory. A GPS route demands specific turns. A compass heading lets you wander while still knowing north. To make the map, you have to walk first.