He learned early that survival isn't
about strength.
It's about structure.
Carlo Guerra was supposed to escape.
A scholarship. A future.
A way out of Philadephia and the gang
that claimed him at twelve.
Instead, one injury-and one institional
desicion-erased him.
After four years in prison, Carlo tries
to rebuild an honest life.
But the past he thought he'd outlived hasn't forgotten him.
Old debts remain. Old loyalties curdle. And the gang he once called family
comes to even the score.
So, Carlo disappears.
He becomes Michael Hererra-a new name, a new identity in Florida, a
quiet job, and a daughter he will do anything to protect.
He survives by studying the systems that failed him, learning where power
actually lives: behind paperwork, silence, and proceedure.
Invisable men are hard to find.
When the world around him collapses under its own corruption,
Michael is the only one left standing. Not because he was innocent, but
because he understood how systems fail long before they do.
As his daughter grows, questions surface.
And the man who survived by becoming someone else must decide
what truth costs. And whether Carlo Guerra can stay buried.
The Name He Carried is a gripping, morally
complex novel about reinvention, quiet
power, and the price of being right in
systems that punishes it.
A story of crime, consequence and the
identities we build to survive