The audiobook is now on Audible and Apple Books. More platforms are coming!
Most children don’t remember when the fear begins. It arrives fully formed, as if waiting for them. One night, the room is just a room. The next, the space beneath the bed has weight to it. It’s more than the darkness. It feels like presence.
It showed up in the body before it ever formed a thought. A tightening across the shoulders that pulled inward, a chill along the spine that made stillness feel exposed. Even before you understood why, you adjusted and centered.
I remember the rules before...
It’s a fair question. One I expected. When I wrote Chapter One of Drift, I anchored the opening in something that feels unsettling because it is grounded in reality. The rising incidence of certain birth defects, neurological disorders, and developmental conditions is not something I invented for the story. It is reflected in the available data.
In the book, Andrew walks through a series of numbers that feel almost too sharp to ignore. Autism spectrum disorder, for example, was once estimated...
Here's the latest advertising tool for Drift. A one-minute video trailer.
Something is brewing. A story has taken hold of me. The kind that wakes you up at 3:00 in the morning with a new idea, the kind that follows you into the grocery store, while you're alone in the car, and every quiet moment in between. I'm thrilled to share it with you today, even if only in pieces: I'm deep into a new manuscript, and it's called Blind Spot.
I'll start with what I can tell you, which is enough to give you a real taste. Hopefully, this will leave you wanting more.
The Story...
The idea for Drift goes back to college. At the time, I wasn’t studying genetics or medicine in any formal way, but I was paying attention. I noticed conversations emerging around genetic anomalies, unexplained conditions, and birth defects that seemed to be appearing more frequently. Most explanations pointed to better diagnostics, improved reporting, and broader screening. Those explanations made sense. They still do. But even then, it felt incomplete.
If improved detection were the whole...