About

I write fiction and nonfiction, usually about what happens when people stop seeing their own choices. Most of my work examines systems—political, technological, domestic—not as forces that act on people, but as structures people participate in, without fully recognizing that participation.

How does complicity become invisible? What do people tell themselves when constraint feels like fate? Where does responsibility go when everyone is “just doing what they have to”?

My method is observation without interpretation. I’m drawn to the gap between what people say and what they do—especially when that gap is invisible to them. The work stays with that gap.

I’m not interested in advocacy, exile narratives, or representing a place. Geography appears in my work as material, not identity.