Six Series. Six Worlds. One Shared Bookshelf.
Across YA epic fantasy, urban romantasy, contemporary STEM-inheritance fiction, sci-fi mystery, and MG/YA adventure — six series that span genre but share a writer’s fingerprint. The Shattered Crown trilogy is live on Amazon. Five more series are in active production.
Shattered CrownLive on Amazon
A lost king. A magic-rank system that demands sacrifice. A trilogy that asks who actually pays for power.
YA / new-adult epic fantasy. The opening volume of my published catalog — the trilogy that proved the writing system worked. If you like ranked magic systems, ensemble casts that refuse to behave, and a villain who is right about something, start here.
- Book 1: Awakening — The lost king wakes with lightning in his hands and a crown floating just behind his shoulder.
- Book 2: Ascension — The price of climbing the magic ranks comes due. Some characters pay. One refuses.
- Book 3: Dominion — The rules of the rank system were lying the whole time. The reckoning is who knew, and when.
The Cosmic Heritage ChroniclesIn production
Five books. One mathematical notebook. Four generations of a Bengali-Canadian family carrying work that no aerospace institution has yet recognized.
YA contemporary fiction. Sixteen-year-old Zayan Rahman in Scarborough inherits his great-grandfather’s notebook — a fixed-point convergence problem in trajectory optimization that Abdur Rahman developed in Dhaka between 1962 and his death in 2003, that Zayan’s grandfather preserved at the family’s kitchen table, and that Zayan progressively solves across the five books. The institutional arc moves him from a regional STEM fair through the U.S. Space & Rocket Center, the CSA Cairo/Bangalore working group, MIT aerospace engineering, and finally into the senior institution where the family work begins to enter the formal canon. Threaded throughout: Dr. Elias Ravenheart, a retired Princeton mathematician whose knowledge of the Rahman family is too specific to be coincidence.
- Book 1: Launch Trajectory — The notebook is handed over. The regional STEM fair is won. A man in a tweed jacket at a Nashville layover gate already knows about page 47.
- Book 2: Zero Gravity Protocol — Three weeks at Space Camp. The cohort isn’t built to listen. The instructor is. The breakthrough on page 47 comes in a library, from the man who keeps recognizing things he shouldn’t.
- Book 3: Recursive Inheritance — The CSA attachment begins. Bangalore and Cairo open up. Nana’s tremor is diagnosed. MIT sends an acceptance.
- Book 4: Fixed Point — MIT undergraduate aerospace. The mathematics meets the institutions that decide what counts as discovery.
- Book 5: Cosmic Heritage — A senior aerospace institution. Director Vasquez of the CSA as the institutional antagonist. The work enters the canon.
The Echo AdaptationIn production
Three books. An Echo Bloodline that absorbs technique, time, and reality itself — and a young man who is told what he is allowed to become, and decides otherwise.
Fantasy / sci-fi hybrid. Across The Blood Circuit, The Guilded Cage, and The Echo Throne, the trilogy follows the rise of a protagonist whose bloodline can read and absorb other forms of power — and the political, mythological, and personal cost of being the only one in the room the rank system can’t classify. The trilogy ends with him stepping outside its borders entirely. (Readers of The Riven Saga: yes. That’s where Ravenheart comes from.)
- Book 1: The Blood Circuit — Arena combat as the entry-level metaphor. The first time the bloodline shows what it can do.
- Book 2: The Guilded Cage — Captivity, courtly manipulation, the cost of being collected as a curiosity rather than respected as a player.
- Book 3: The Echo Throne — The political ascent and the choice that closes the trilogy and opens the next thing.
The Frequency FilesIn production
Eight books. One signal carried across mysteries, paradoxes, parallel realities, time mechanics, and a school built around what the signal teaches.
Sci-fi mystery sequence. Each book is its own case — the signal hunters in Book 1, the code-breaker team in Book 2 — but the cases compound. By the Echo Paradox the rules of the world are visibly bending; by the Time Guardians the rules are themselves the case; by the Convergence everything comes home. For readers who want the cliffhanger cadence of serialized TV with the interior weight of a novel.
- Book 1: The Signal Hunters — The first case: a signal no instrument can source, and the team that goes looking for where it’s coming from.
- Book 2: The Code Breakers — A second signal, encrypted. The code-breaker team forms — and the separate cases start quietly connecting.
- Book 3: The Echo Paradox — The rules of the world begin to bend. An effect arrives before its cause, and no one can explain it.
- Book 4: The Parallel Signals — The same signal surfaces in two places at once. Parallel realities start bleeding into each other.
- Book 5: The Time Guardians — Time itself becomes the case. The team has to guard the sequence of events the signal is trying to rewrite.
- Book 6: The Cosmic Frequencies — The signal scales past Earth. What looked like a mystery turns out to be cosmic in origin and stakes.
- Book 7: The Frequency Academy — A school built around what the signal teaches. The next generation is trained for what’s coming.
- Book 8: The Infinite Frequency Convergence — Every case, every signal, every reality converges. Everything comes home.
The Riven SagaIn production
A trilogy. An F-rank hunter, an A-rank instructor, an industrial port city of fog and rust, and a magic system that judges everyone the moment they turn eighteen.
YA urban romantasy / progression fantasy. Dual POV between Riven Vayne (18, ranked F, told he doesn’t matter) and Astrid Vale (25, A-rank instructor, told the rankings are correct). Ironhaven is the city; Gates appearing across the world are the new normal; Hunters are celebrities; the Interface that ranked Riven only Riven can see. Threaded through every book is a figure called The Raven — a dimensional wanderer the Flux system can’t read — whose fuller name Sable says once, quietly, like naming a myth she half-believes in. (Yes. He came from The Echo Throne.)
- Book 1: Ironhaven — Aptitude test. F-rank. Hidden interface. The fellow rejects who become a found family. Forced proximity to the instructor who isn’t sure the rankings are right.
- Book 2: Ironblood — The system shows what it does to people who climb where they aren’t supposed to. The Raven’s name gets spoken aloud for the first time.
- Book 3: Ironfire — The choice the system was built to prevent.
The Temporal Rift GuardiansIn production
Five books. Three young people. One Temporal Vandal who is not a monster, who has seen a future they’re trying to prevent. STEM adventure for readers 10–15 who want their fiction to take ideas seriously.
MG / YA crossover. The Guardians don’t time-travel for the thrill; they do the precise, unglamorous work of restoring human confidence in the value of knowledge, connection, and ideas. The Vandal’s logic is coherent — that’s the horror. Across five books the threat scales from a single town to a civilizational reckoning. Running beneath the main story, never explained, never in a chapter heading: a figure called Ravenheart, immortal, working alone, leaving things in the right place for people who don’t yet know they’ll need them.
- Book 1: The First Fracture — A friendship erased. A jam jar nobody has ever moved. A green notebook that fills up.
- Book 2: Ancient Echoes — Three cultures, three confidences. The three questions are given.
- Book 3: The Echo of Revolution — Three revolutions. Three words at risk: liberty, equality, fraternity.
- Book 4: The Architect’s Design — The Vandal’s identity is revealed. The future they’re protecting against is named.
- Book 5: The Weight of Echoes — The mission itself is on the table. The Vandal chooses differently.