Novels

  • The Lawgiver

    In an empire on the brink of fracture, loyalty is a weapon—and truth, a dangerous secret.

    The provinces demand more—more energy, more autonomy, more say in the Empire’s future. But the Lawgiver, absolute ruler of a fragile system, refuses to yield. When his trusted Deputy, Evet Arkardis, quietly joins a forbidden sect known as the Followers of Mishnova, the struggle for power turns personal.

    As rebellion simmers and alliances shift in the shadows, a long-lost exile returns from Planet J with news that could remake the Empire: a hidden civilization, rich in the energy resource tygerium, is ready to return—and ready to bargain.

    Caught between loyalty and belief, deception and duty, Arkardis walks a tightrope of betrayal for the sake of peace. And on Lawgiver’s Day, with two fleets approaching Empire airspace, one ruler must decide whether to crush a movement—or transform a nation.

    A gripping tale of political intrigue, spiritual rebellion, and the price of unity, The Last Lawgiver is the story of an empire’s end—and a federation’s beginning.

  • Gaster’s Story

    In the time of the Great Migration, a tribe of lemmings journeys east, bound by ancient instinct and a promise whispered through generations: cross the three rivers, and find the land beyond fate. Only one has ever returned—Crispo, the Coward—who now entrusts his grandson Gaster with a secret map of riddled truths: be first, be last, walk between stone, and take the high road when the path divides.

    Guided by fragments and faith, Gaster follows the tribe through waters that consume, mountains that bleed, and skies ruled by talons. As his companions fall and the trail narrows, he begins to see the deeper pattern—the migrations are not journeys, but reckonings.

    At the final crossing, Gaster must face the cost of blind devotion and the silence that follows a truth too heavy for memory. In the end, he returns not as a hero, but as a witness.

    Gaster’s Story is a mythic fable of obedience and awakening, of sacred lies and quiet defiance—a timeless tale for anyone who has followed the path only to find the edge of the world.

  • Blue Mango Moon

    “They didn’t break the system. They bought it.”

    When the FDA rejects their bioengineered blue mango tomato, billionaire couple Chad and Kayla decide it's not the fruit that's broken—it's the system. Their solution? Buy Congress.

    With a populist manifesto, a war chest of billions, and a private command center called "The Bunker," they launch the New Federalist Party and fund all 435 House races. As chaos unfolds, strategist Thomas Johnson navigates backroom deals, collapsing campaigns, and a surreal wedding on a private island.

    By Election Day, the rules have changed—and so has the country.

    The Blue Mango Moon skewers the political-industrial complex with a scalpel of wit. Part political thriller, part dark comedy, this is the story of a nation up for auction—and the billionaires who dare to buy it.

  • VALAHOL

    Phillip Hinton awakens 350 years in the future, diagnosed with “Lizard Sleep”—a mysterious condition tied to a hallucinogenic plant. But Hinton insists he was abducted by an alien and cast into this dazzling, unfamiliar world.

    In the utopia of Valahol—where holographic art, genetic wonders, and social harmony flourish—his story is dismissed as fantasy. Haunted by memories of his lost family, Hinton teams up with a skeptical historian and a visionary poet to uncover buried truths.

    Their search leads into the criminal underworld, where rumors of mind harvesting and the legendary Lizard Men point to a secret that could lead Hinton home—or undo everything.

    Valahol is a journey through memory and myth, and the search for truth in a world that has forgotten the past.

Plays

  • The Park Bench

    The play and a Review are available on YouTube.

  • Holgrave’s Story

    Adapted from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The House of the Seven Gables

     

    This dramatization reimagines Hawthorne’s classic through the lens of Holgrave, the enigmatic daguerreotypist, shifting the tale from one of revenge and retribution to a story of awakening and love. By transforming narrative exposition into character-driven dialogue, Holgrave’s Story offers fresh insight while remaining true to the spirit of Hawthorne’s original prose. The result is a compelling new perspective on a timeless American novel.

  • The Raven and the Answering Carol

    In 1842 Philadelphia, a single evening brings together two towering literary figures—Charles Dickens and Edgar Allan Poe. What begins as a formal meeting between a world-famous British novelist and an ambitious American writer quickly unfolds into an intimate, thought-provoking encounter. Over tea, brandy, and literary debate, the men explore their differing views on art, fame, criticism, and morality. As Dickens’s wife Kate and servant Anne offer glimpses into their private struggles and past sorrows, the evening takes on deeper emotional resonance. Against a backdrop of public adoration, professional ambition, and personal grief, this imagined meeting becomes a catalyst for Poe’s most iconic work—and a meditation on the cost and calling of the creative life.

  • Make a Left at Indian Joe

    A fast-paced culture clashing comedy about a NJ trucking executive who finds out he was supposed to be a chief.  Literally.

    When Brad Wilson, a successful trucking executive, learns he was adopted into white society to fulfill a Native American prophecy, he must return to the Owandian reservation to assume his role as tribal chief. As he reconnects with his roots, he falls in love with a tribal woman and finds himself caught between honoring tribal traditions and forging a modern path forward. To secure the tribe’s future and his own happiness, Brad must challenge expectations, reinterpret destiny, and unite a divided community.

  • Mr. Ferguson’s Christmas Eve

    Mr. Ferguson’s Christmas Eve is a heartwarming play about Horace Ferguson, retiring after forty years as custodian of St. Jerome’s Cemetery. Known for placing Christmas wreaths on forgotten graves, Horace receives visits from family, friends—and perhaps a few others—on his final day.

    Mr. Ferguson’s Christmas Eve is a play filled with humor, heart and a touch of mystery.

  • The Friends of Roderick Usher

    Friends of Roderick Usher is a psychological reimagining inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s classic tale, The Fall of the House of Usher. The play explores the emotional aftermath of witnessing horror too great to bear—when the unnamed narrator, having assisted in the premature burial of Roderick Usher’s sister, descends into madness upon discovering she was still alive. Her return from the tomb and dramatic collapse upon her brother leads to his death—and the narrator’s flight from the collapsing, cursed house.

     

    This original work poses a haunting question: what becomes of a man who witnesses such unearthly terror? The play imagines the narrator’s struggle to regain his sanity by recounting the unspeakable events he lived through. In doing so, it becomes the story before the story—the psychological reckoning that makes Poe’s original tale possible.

     

    Audiences need not be familiar with Poe’s short story to engage with this compelling theatrical experience, though prior knowledge of it may deepen their appreciation of its chilling homage.

  • The Insurrectionist

    When a young Jewish woman and a Catholic woman accept an invitation from a Muslim man to attend an Open House at a dergah (mosque) in Upstate New York, they unknowingly step into a volatile situation. Unbeknownst to them, a wanted terrorist is hiding within the sacred space. As the evening's celebration unfolds, an unexpected encounter sets off a chain of revelations—unmasking hidden identities, exposing personal truths, and leading to a tragic confrontation that claims the lives of the terrorist and an innocent friend.

  • Suleyman

    “Suleyman” follows the gripping rise of Yanko, a Greek slave who climbs the ranks to become commander of Suleyman the Magnificent’ s army—only to challenge the Sultan himself for the Ottoman throne. Set against a backdrop of palace intrigue, the play explores the fierce interplay of love, ambition, betrayal, and revenge in a world where loyalty is fragile and power comes at a cost.

  • The Last Victim of the Holocaust

    A German American man—raised in the U.S. but haunted by the legacy of the Holocaust—reaches a breaking point and orchestrates a confrontation with police, seeking death by cop. As tensions rise, his closest friend crosses police lines in a desperate attempt to reach him. What follows is an unraveling of long-buried secrets and personal reckonings that illuminate the past and reshape their understanding of identity, guilt, and friendship—even as the confrontation hurtles toward a tragic end.