I didn’t write Alien I Am to be consumed quickly.
I didn’t write it to be skimmed, raced through, or finished in a weekend and forgotten. And I didn’t write it to compete with the loudest, fastest science-fiction stories out there.
I wrote it for a very specific kind of reader—one I didn’t fully understand until the book was finished.
This page exists to tell you, plainly and respectfully, whether Alien I Am is meant for you.
This Book Is For Readers Who…
Feel out of sync with the world.
If you’ve always sensed that the volume of human suffering, noise, and urgency hits you harder than it seems to hit others—this story understands that feeling.
Enjoy slow discovery rather than instant answers.
Alien I Am does not explain everything upfront. Meaning unfolds gradually, sometimes sideways, sometimes through implication, fragments, and secondary texts.
Like puzzle-box stories. (Dossier format – seven layers of lore)
The novel includes layered elements—story, logs, shards, and deeper lore—that reward curiosity. You don’t need to catch everything on a first read, and you’re not expected to.
Are comfortable with ambiguity.
Some questions are answered. Some are reframed. Some are left open on purpose. This is intentional, not accidental.
Value emotional truth as much as plot mechanics.
This is not just a story about aliens. It’s a story about sensitivity, responsibility, and what it feels like to be awake in a world that seems determined to ignore its own trajectory.
Like being trusted as a reader.
The book assumes patience, attention, and emotional intelligence. It doesn’t rush to justify itself.
This Book May Not Be For You If…
- You’re looking for nonstop action or rapid twists
- You prefer stories where everything is clearly explained and resolved
- You skim descriptions to get back to the plot
- You read primarily for fast-paced entertainment
- You want science fiction that functions purely as spectacle
None of that is wrong—it’s just not what this book is trying to be.
What Kind of Story This Is
Alien I Am is a character-driven science-fiction story with a strong internal gravity.
It explores what it means to feel “marked” long before anything external confirms it. It treats first contact not as a fireworks display, but as something unsettling, intimate, and deeply personal.
The lore matters.
The emotional state of the protagonist matters.
The order in which information is revealed matters.
This is a story that expects you to pause, reflect, and sometimes sit with discomfort.
A Note to the Right Reader
If you’ve ever read a book and thought, “This feels like it’s speaking directly to something I don’t usually have words for,” then you’re exactly who this was written for.
You don’t need to rush.
You don’t need to understand everything at once.
You’re allowed to go deep—and come back later.
That’s how the story was designed.