About Insane Entities
Chuck was just a cop doing his job—until he met Lily. She’s beautiful, manipulative, and not from here. After one strange encounter, he’s thrown into a twisted alternate reality called the Fabric, where nothing makes sense and everything wants him dead.
Lily says he has to love her and kill her ex—someone called the Fabricator—to escape. But that ex might be the one who built the entire Fabric in the first place.
Things only get worse. Caleb, Lily’s unstable son, is a walking disaster. Olympia, the Fabricator’s new lover, is an all-powerful psychopath who’s taken control of Lily’s daughter, Rhona—and an army of three-eyed lizards led by something named Khepri. She tortures whatever still breathes, and it pushes Chuck to the edge.
He joins a rebel force led by Shanika, the Rose Lady who never eats or drinks, and Nipuna, a scientist who calls his magic “just science.” Alongside their white-clad army and its warrior-leader Moriab, Chuck finds himself in a war that might not have a way out.
This isn’t just fantasy. It’s something far stranger.
Insane Entities pulls you into a world that feels broken at the core—like reality has been twisted by something ancient and cruel. Nothing here behaves the way it should. People bleed for reasons they don’t understand. Love turns inside out. And survival? It’s a slow, grinding war against something you can’t even name.
The story moves fast—chaotic, jagged, almost violent in how it throws you from one scene to the next. There’s no pause, no breath. Just pain, madness, obsession… and something that might be salvation, if you’re lucky—or cursed.
It’s soaked in blood, but not just for show. The violence means something. It’s part of the world, like weather. The characters don’t just suffer—they change, break, mutate. Some become monsters. Some already were.
This isn’t clean. It’s not comfortable. It’s dark fantasy burned together with sci-fi and horror, shaped into something experimental and raw. Like a nightmare you can’t quite wake up from—but also don’t want to.
If you’ve ever loved a story that felt dangerous… if you want something that grabs you by the throat and drags you through hell, Insane Entities might be exactly what you’ve been waiting for.
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Author Bio:
I wrote a book that could probably get me exiled, exorcised, or worse — unfriended by my mom. That’s why I’m keeping my name off it. Not because I’m shy (okay, a little), but because Insane Entities isn’t exactly what you’d call “safe reading” in my part of the world.
Let’s just say if religious satire were a sport, this book would be banned in the Olympics.
I’m just a writer who loves cosmic horror, twisted theology, and asking uncomfortable questions. You know, the kind of questions that get you side-eyed at family dinners and possibly investigated by local authorities.
So I stay in the shadows… but my words? They’re loud.