A collection of visionary short fiction, poetic reflections, and thoughtful essays on our changing world.
On a winter day at a book fair, a little girl shares a small mystery. She says there’s an alien in her glove — and she says it as if it’s perfectly ordinary.
From that moment grows a soft, thoughtful story about imagination and responsibility, told with warmth and restraint. As the child takes her unseen companion along through daily moments of play and care, she quietly practices kindness, attention, and letting go.
There’s an Alien in My Glove is a beautifully illustrated picture book for children ages 3–7 and the adults who read with them. Calm and emotionally gentle, it’s ideal for bedtime, quiet reading, or moments when children need reassurance without explanation.
This story invites readers to slow down and listen — to imagination, to feelings, and to the small comforts that sometimes stay just long enough to help us grow.

What would the world look like if you were an Oak tree that lived thousands of years and could remember everything?
The Oak Witness is a lyrical, illustrated meditation on memory, loss, and renewal, told through the voice of Lunarieth, an ancient oak who has stood watch for centuries. From her rooted place in the soil, she remembers humanity — its hopes, its failures, and its quiet disappearance — and carries those stories forward through leaf, wind, and time.
As the human age fades, new voices begin to stir on Earth, rising from forest and ocean alike. Through Lunarieth’s witnessing, the story explores the cycles of collapse and renewal, the sacred feminine woven into nature, and the possibility of life after us.
Written in clear, spacious prose and accompanied by full-colour illustrations, The Oak Witness invites readers of all ages to slow down, reflect, and ask what it means to belong to a living planet — and what responsibility memory itself may carry.

When the dam cracked, it wasn't the concrete that failed --- it was everything we thought we could contain.
The King of Dams is a haunting story about human ambition and the forces that shape, erode, and reclaim it. Beneath stormlight and silence, a monumental structure becomes a mirror for the people who built it and the world it was meant to hold back.
Susan Trott's prose moves like water under pressure-spare, luminous, and inexorable-as she explores the thin architecture between control and surrender, civilization and collapse. At once lyrical and mythic, this short novel asks what remains when power meets consequence, and whether redemption can survive the roar beneath the still water.

When the first immortals came to Earth, humanity was not yet ready—but destiny had already begun.
Set over 30,000 years ago, First Contact unveils the forgotten arrival of the Zydeans—an ancient, near-immortal species who sought refuge beneath Antarctica’s ice. As they observe primitive humans, moral lines blur between science and compassion, leading to the first merging of two species.
This origin tale bridges the Immortal Stories and The Arvidan Chronicles series, blending mythic science fiction, sensual awakening, and the birth of a shared destiny between worlds.
From the observant mind of Susan Trott come essays that wander between outrage and wonder, politics and poetry, civilization and collapse. Expect truth served with wit, a splash of rebellion, and the occasional seed of hope poking through the cracks of power.