
THE BOOKS

BLESSED VESSEL
Blessed Vessel is a fast-paced comedy action horror with elements of LITRPG, akin to a light novel.
In the middle of a charity casino night, attendees are suddenly thrust into a waking nightmare wherein their minds and bodies are swapped about. When the swirling ceases, nobody is themselves, and there’s a black fog over the city. Also there are giant, glowing bugs. And also maybe something is hunting them. Also there is, at one point, an orgy massacre.
Blessed Vessel releases on June 20th.

SPRiNG PEELiNG
Spring Peeling is the book that served as seed and soil for the Post Carrington Universe. The initial draft was completed over the course of seven weeks (April-May 2025), and came out to 510 pages. Jon has spent the past year building upon the foundation that was laid during the birth of this book.
It kicks off the meeting of Sam & Stig, our cursed pair of protagonists with a shared problem: neither of them can die. The same cannot be said for those around them. Their paths cross within a dystopian theme park run by a maniacal child prodigy. Nuff said.
Spring Peeling will go into editing following the release of Blessed Vessel.

SUMMER CULLiNG
Told through a collection of short stories and two novelettes, the events of Summer Culling take place between the inciting Carrington Event of 2012 and the days leading up to Spring Peeling. Though many of the stories are short, punchy horrors, we also get a glimpse of what happens when an entire civilization is suddenly catapulted back to a technological age of which they’d spent the past century and a half growing out of. Blessed Vessel was originally a novelette and part of this collection.
Summer Culling will go into editing following the release of Spring Peeling.

WiNTER SPLiNTER
After the events of Spring Peeling, Sam & Stig are stuck together.
Over the next century, the begrudgingly immortal duo try their best to stay out of trouble.
Their intentions pure, hell finds them time and time again.
Told through a series of novelettes (or “episodes”), Winter Splinter explores what it’s like trying to come to terms with being—practically speaking—a demigod.
