The Sigil of Silence is a descent into the Geopolitical Thriller. It is a documentation of the modern grid—where the neon masks the filth and hunger dwells within the cleanest hands. Preceding this modern signal is the Zyphar Chronicles, a work of Literary Fictionthat established the first fire with The Becoming.
These two series, connected by the same systemic tension, dissolve the boundaries of genre, blending poetic narrative with the brutal realism of current world conflicts.
This page is your invitation to enter — no passwords, no expectations. Every title listed below leads to a selection of free chapters, directly from the author. Click a name and begin where you choose. Whether you are entering the neon-lit streets of Silence Called Me or the mythic corridors of The Becoming, every choice carries a cost.
Zyphar Chronicles
Zyphar Chronicles I: The Becoming—a poetic, soul-stirring journey through memory, exile, fire, and spiritual conflict.
The Sigil of Silence is a descent into the Geopolitical Thriller. It is a documentation of the modern grid—where the neon masks the filth and hunger dwells within the cleanest hands.
Zyphar Book Series operates as a dual-frequency transmission, navigating the friction between the modern grid and the ancient mirror. This is not entertainment designed for comfort; it is a documentation of the systemic forces that shape, break, and ultimately consume the individual. Whether through the lens of a Geopolitical Thriller or the introspective depths of Literary Fiction, the narrative remains unblinking. It is an exploration of the unobserved, where the cost of existence is paid in secrets, blood, and the slow erosion of the self.
The Modern Breach: Sigil of Silence
The first frequency, defined by the series Sigil of Silence, is a clinical dissection of survival within the gray zones of the global landscape. It begins with the breach titled Silence Called Me. In this world, the traditional concepts of justice and morality have been replaced by the cold metrics of possession—of wealth, of information, and of the leverage required to stay off the radar. This is a landscape where the neon of cities like Phuket and the glimmering spires of KL act as a shroud for the technical rot beneath.
The players in this geopolitical theater—Elijan Vellum, Marisha, and the ghost-commander Jovan—are not protagonists in a traditional sense. They are technicians of their own fate, navigating a world where the only god worth fearing is currency. But the true architect of this descent is The Maker, an abandoned intelligence that has ceased to seek permission. As the series progresses through The Merchant of Silence, The Price of Silence, Roar of Fire, and Peacefully Yours, the signal becomes clearer: in a world ruled by strategy, the only real variable is what you become when the silence finally demands an answer.
The Mythic Foundation: Zyphar Chronicles
Parallel to the modern grid exists the Zyphar Chronicles, a work of Literary Fiction that functions as the spiritual and systemic foundation of the canon. It opened with the first fire, The Becoming, introducing the City of Smoke and Mirrors. This is an architecture built on desire—a place where every reflection carries a debt and every choice is a cage. It is here that we witness the journey of the slayer who chooses the weight of silence over the relief of rage, establishing a mirror from which no observer truly escapes.
While the setting of the Chronicles feels archaic, its heart is tethered to the same systemic violence that fuels the modern thrillers. It explores the burden of the awakened—those eternal observers trapped between the worlds of what was and what is yet to be. It questions the very nature of identity and existence, suggesting that the truth is as fluid as a river’s current, shifting with every moment of perception. To read these pages is to surrender the illusion of a full picture and instead delve into the riddles that lie just beneath the surface of reality.
The Convergence of Realism and Poetics
The Zyphar Book Series dissolves the arbitrary boundaries of genre. It merges the high-stakes tension of international conflict with a poetic narrative that refuses to offer easy answers. There are no innocents left in these pages; there are only those who remember what mercy felt like and those who have become the blade. This is a story about the honesty of survival and the questions that never close.
Why does violence feel like relief? Can the ghosts of the past ever be outrun, or do we simply gather more of them as we move? The line between justice and vengeance is not a boundary, but a vanishing point. This dual-canon legacy is a mirror held up to a world that prefers to remain unobserved. The signal is active. The fire is set. The only remaining question is—what will you do when Silence calls your name?