Once wrote how to heal
Now I write what broke me

Debut Novel
Safe Words for the Damned is a novel about control disguised as devotion. It’s about who we become when we stop asking for permission, and what’s left when the silence runs out.
Currently in submission. If you’re an agent looking for the next voice, you know where to find me.
Proof I once believed in happy endings.

Sometimes Shit Is Just Shit
I thought writing this would save me.
How’s that for irony?
Nowhere to Go is what happens when a man tries to make sense of his own collapse in real time.
Part self-help, part confessional, part “what the hell was I thinking,” this book is a time capsule of a guy who hadn’t yet learned that healing isn’t linear—and life doesn’t hand out closure.
Inside are stories meant to fix something.
Spoiler: they didn’t.
Turns out, you can’t write your way out. But maybe you can write your way through.
No promises. Just a record of trying.

These Weren’t Meant to Be Poems
This isn’t your grandma’s poetry book. It’s the story of love told after the house burns down.
From the high of first kisses to the slow violence of betrayal, these poems come from a man who tried, failed, and kept writing anyway.
Written in the aftermath of divorce, they don’t promise healing. Just honesty.
No sugar. No soft landings. Just the wreckage and what it teaches you if you’re still standing.
Read if you’ve ever loved hard, lost harder, and still believe in something like hope, even if you’d never admit it sober

A story for children of divorce. And the parents trying not to disappear.
In 2019, everything fell apart.
Suddenly I was a single dad, holding my daughter’s world together with bedtime stories and borrowed hope. Divorce cracked both of us open.
She didn’t need lectures. She needed stories. So every night, we made our own. From that ritual came Mia and Her Twin Castles—a story for kids caught in the chaos of separation, bouncing between homes, trying to make sense of a world that split in two.
This isn’t just a book. It’s a hand to hold when everything else feels broken.