We are all social, in the end

book notes
25, Jan 2026
BETA feedback and editing completed

Project Radiant: The Final Stretch After months of writing, rewriting, and editing, I’m thrilled to share that I’m in the final stretch of releasing my next book: Project Radiant, a political, techno-dystopian thriller set in a near-future Britain dominated by AI. A Glimpse into the StoryJournalist Sarah Perriam’s career is…

title page - Project Radiant
16, Jan 2026
Become an ARC reader for “Project Radiant”

Project Radiant is the first book in a series of tech and political satire/thrillers. In a future Britain run by algorithms, one disillusioned journalist stumbles onto a conspiracy that could shake democracy to its core. As AI systems quietly manipulate public policy, social media, and even reality itself, Sarah Perriam…

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1, Jan 2026
Why You Should Keep Going (Even When Everything Feels Pointless)

Writing is hard. Not coal-mining hard, but emotionally taxing, mentally draining, occasionally soul-wilting. Some days you’ll wonder why you bother. Some days the words won’t flow. Some days you’ll reread a paragraph and question every decision you’ve ever made. But here’s why you keep going: because you have stories to…

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27, Dec 2025
Comparing Yourself to Other Writers: A Sport We Should Retire in the New Year

As we come to the new year, we need to all make a resolution… Every writer compares themselves to others. It’s practically a national pastime. You read a brilliant sentence and briefly consider setting your laptop on fire. You see someone finish a novel and wonder why you’ve been drafting…

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24, Dec 2025
Writer’s Block: Sometimes It’s Just a Tired Brain

As I ready myself for the upcoming Norwegian Christmas, which they celebrate on the 24th. This is great for me, as I get two Christmas dinners. But I have been having a struggle for a while, procrastination is one word for it, another is phrase we use is writers block.…

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22, Dec 2025
Reading Like a Writer (Or, How to Ruin Books Forever)

As readers, when we were young, we first started ruining our enjoyment of books in English Literature class where we would review Macbeth, An Inspector Calls or some other classic book to the end of term and never want to read them again. The same happened to me when I…

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19, Dec 2025
The Revision Stage: Where the Real Writing Happens

Revising a manuscript is a bit like realising the house you built has several crooked walls, a suspicious smell, and a family of raccoons living in the attic. It’s overwhelming. It’s humbling. But it’s also where the magic happens. Revision lets you transform chaos into clarity. You refine character arcs,…

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16, Dec 2025
When Your Characters Start Making Decisions Without You

There comes a moment in every writer’s journey when a character refuses to do what they’re told. You’ve outlined their arc, planned their choices, possibly even diagrammed their emotional trajectory like a deranged cartographer, and then they simply disobey. This is not madness. This is writing. When characters “take over,”…

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10, Dec 2025
The Art of Finishing Something (Even If you think It’s Rubbish)

Finishing a draft is a milestone many new writers never reach. Not because they lack talent, but because finishing requires stamina, stubbornness, and the ability to ignore the seductive whispers of New Story Ideas that show up precisely when your current project becomes difficult. The middle of a manuscript is…

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not writing
7, Dec 2025
Building a Writing Habit Without Resenting It

There’s a persistent belief that real writers write every day, preferably at dawn, possibly while wearing a whimsical scarf and a hat at a jaunty angle. While writing regularly is helpful, turning it into a rigid requirement is a fast track to burnout and creative rebellion, the kind where your…

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