Literary Fiction · Sci-Fi Elements

The Biggest Little Love In The World

90,000 words

New York, 2000. Levi hasn't said his dead boyfriend's name in three years and four months. Then his sister leaves a duffel bag of notebooks on his bed: a decade of the shared sci-fi universe he and Ricky built together, complete with margin arguments, accidental confessions, and a story that cuts off mid-sentence. To keep Ricky known, not archived, not mourned at a tasteful distance, but truly kept, Levi has to write the ending himself.

A novel about neurodivergent love, the AIDS crisis, and the difference between preserving someone's work and preserving the person.

Pages available upon request.
Speculative Short Story Collection

Faulty Wonders

55,000 words

A thief princess climbs a sick boy's hair to break him out of his tower. Two strangers meet at a sold-out suicide pill shelf on Christmas Eve and argue about Greek mythology. A comedian gets fired, loses her boyfriend, and starts receiving targeted life advice from a god with zero followers. An organ farm reads Schopenhauer alone in a basement and decides she has opinions about it.

These twelve stories know what it costs to stay alive in a body the world keeps trying to write off and why we do it anyway. Characters thrust into bleak realities reach for whimsy, connection, and righteous fury. Glass domes. Revolutions planned in pajamas. Reasons.

Faulty Wonders is ugly, radical hope for the End Times and a loving insistence on the After.

Pages available upon request.
Memoir · Journalistic & Creative Nonfiction

Collateral—An Actor's Notes from the Long Covid Trenches

85,000 words

After my High School Yearbook crowned me "Most likely to play hooky", I did everything in my power to not be "the sick kid". I smiled away migraines on stage, denied my autistic needs while freezing on set, and joined a manifestation cult to high vibe my fragile body into submission. Why? Because sick means lonely. Sick means weird. Sick is the opposite of the famous actor I was destined to be. But when a novel virus watches my Off-Off-Broadway debut, sick is all I'm left with.

Part memoir, part social critique, COLLATERAL follows my disabled-in-denial journey across small-town Germany, San Francisco, London, and New York City, ending in bedbound living. With an analytical yet tender eye, I dissect how Capitalism and collective gaslighting have led to millions of Long Covid cases, and why a community-focused, accessible world is still possible.

Pages available upon request.