I write fiction to explore ideas that sit just beyond the reach of science. My professional life is shaped by evidence, data and the disciplines of precision medicine, yet many of the questions that interest me most, about transformation, belief, consequence and possibility, cannot be answered in a laboratory or an ecosystem strategy document. Stories allow me to examine the spaces where technology meets human uncertainty, where knowledge shifts faster than culture or people adapt, and where ambition defies our ability to predict impact.
Fiction gives me the freedom to test the boundaries of what we understand, to imagine how people and societies respond when confronted with the unfamiliar or the inevitable, and to trace the moral and emotional contours that lie beneath scientific progress. It is a way of thinking in another mode: speculative rather than analytical, but driven by the same curiosity about how the future is built, and what it may cost.
I have always loved reading, and in writing I stumbled on a similar but more visceral form of discovery. Characters acquire a life of their own; they make choices you did not expect and take the story in directions you had not planned. It feels like reading from the inside, and it is that sense of revelation, rather than control, that keeps me returning to fiction.
A madness of the moon
Dylan Blake came to Cape Cod to hide. He wanted only to grieve in peace – and then a poetry reading changed everything.
Elody Roscet is a gifted artist whose haunting poem tells of a family forced to live by night. Intrigued by her and by whispers of an ancient curse, Dylan begins to uncover the Roscet family’s Gothic secrets, and a suspicious death that haunts them still. The closer he comes to the truth, the more he learns that men who approach the Roscets risk more than heartbreak.
In the village of Nobska Hole, where artists have always found refuge, science meets superstition, reason collides with legacy, and one man’s search for truth becomes a journey toward renewal. A Madness of the Moon is an intimate, contemplative exploration of loss, identity, and the courage it takes to begin again.


The Custodian of Murjan
What would you do if someone offered you the chance to build something truly large, but far from everything you know? What would you do if that person died and left you as custodian of his entire life and dreams? What would you do if everything familiar is gone, and you are now faced with a world whose rules, codes and silences are completely alien to you?
What follows is a story about belonging — what it costs, what it requires, and what it means to arrive somewhere so completely that you can no longer remember the person who left.
The Custodian of Murjan is a work in progress, with expected publication by end of 2026.

A Short immortality
How far is too far? Tech, Biotech and the pursuit of immortality
Coming sometime during 2027