INHUMAN
Evelyn Faye is calm when she shouldn't be.
Smiling when everyone else expects remorse.
Standing before a judge accused of a crime she insists she never physically committed, Evelyn is given a choice: life in prison-or confinement in a psychiatric hospital. She chooses the ward without hesitation.
But Inhuman isn't about what Evelyn did.
It's about how she became someone capable of it.
Told through Evelyn's chillingly intimate perspective, this psychological thriller traces a life shaped by neglect, emotional cruelty, domestic abuse, and quiet survival. An alcoholic, volatile mother. A controlling, violent boyfriend. A home where love is conditional and pain is routine. As Evelyn learns to endure, something inside her begins to harden.
Empathy fades. Detachment grows. And the line between victim and villain blurs beyond recognition.
Inhuman is not a redemption story.
It is a descent.
A psychological autopsy of trauma, manipulation, and moral collapse.
This novel asks an uncomfortable question:
At what point does surviving turn into becoming something unrecognizable?