Martin Browne doesn't just struggle with food-he lives inside it.
At 450 pounds, every moment of his life revolves around eating. The ordering. The waiting. The ritual. The brief, hollow relief. And then the hunger again-unchanged, untouched, waiting.
But something begins to shift.
Meals don't stay gone.
The feeling of fullness never arrives.
A second rhythm begins inside him-steady, patient... aware.
As Martin's world narrows to the space between his body and his appetite, reality itself begins to bend. Rooms stretch. Distance collapses. And somewhere in the quiet, a single word starts to surface-not as a thought, but as a function.
Eat.
What begins as compulsion becomes transformation. What feels like hunger becomes something else entirely.
And by the time Martin understands what's happening to him...
...it no longer needs him to understand.
EAT is a slow-burn psychological horror novel about addiction, identity, and the terrifying moment when the voice inside your head stops being yours.