This book is not a confession.
It is not a diary.
It is not a political programme.
It is a fictional anarchist manifesto, written as a novel.
Set inside a fractured, surveilled, late-capitalist world, the story follows a narrator moving through underground networks, psychic collapse, institutional violence, love, resistance, memory, and loss. What begins as a personal account slowly transforms into a collective voice-one that questions authority, technology, conformity, and the quiet submission of everyday life.
Written in raw, lyrical prose and interwoven with punk ethics, countercultural history, digital paranoia, and emotional intensity, this manifesto-novel explores what it means to remain human in a system designed to pacify, monitor, and erase dissent. Love becomes an act of resistance. Memory becomes a weapon. Survival becomes political.
This is a work of fiction, yet it deliberately blurs the line between narrative and manifesto. It does not instruct-it exposes. It does not recruit-it remembers. It does not promise solutions-it refuses silence.
For readers drawn to anarchist philosophy, dystopian fiction, anti-authoritarian literature, underground culture, and experimental narrative forms, this book offers an uncompromising literary experience: unsettling, intimate, and defiant.
This is a novel for those who have felt alienated, silenced, institutionalised, or discarded-and who still refuse to surrender their inner freedom.
A manifesto of anarchy, written as fiction.
A novel that does not ask for permission.