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Fiction

Novels that resist easy resolution. Fiction built from constraint.

Feast of the Broadcast Saints

by Elian Voigt

When a dying man moves during a hospice livestream, disgraced producer Mara Ellis recognizes the truth: the miracle rises and falls with audience attention. A dark literary speculative thriller about livestreamed miracles, platform capitalism, and the price of being watched.

What Survives Is Proof

by Elian Voigt

Nora Hale's husband is gone before the sun reaches the windows. What Evan leaves behind is not grief in any ordinary sense — it's a trail, subtle and deliberate, that refuses to release her.

Declensions of Dark Water

by Elian Voigt

When linguist Rowan Hale arrives in the isolated Icelandic village of Brynjavík to document a disappearing dialect, he discovers a language governed by rules of avoidance, silence, and grammatical restraint — where grammatical errors coincide with physical consequences.

Terms of Unbeing

by Elian Voigt

Gideon Cross signs a lease he doesn't remember reading. At Faust Luxury Residences, identity is negotiable, memory is billable, and every clause hides another beneath it.

Summer of the Glass Bees

by Elian Voigt

Every summer in Millfield, the glass bees return — leaving no sting, only relief. Grief softens. Anger thins. As the bees multiply, archivist Eliza Ward discovers that memory can be archived without being kept.

The Quiet Metric

by Elian Voigt

After a chance meeting at a bookstore reading, two men begin a relationship built on precision, recognition, and the intoxicating relief of feeling understood exactly. What begins as attentiveness slowly hardens into management, then something harder to name.

Liminal 6:17

by Elian Voigt

A recursive, ergodic novel of consent, systems, and care, built on converging points of view and experimental typesetting. The threshold motif runs through both the prose and the page design.