The Words He Didn't Write
Some things read you before you know you are being read.
Elliot Voss hasn't written a word in three years.
After the quiet success of his first novel, the sentences stopped-and so did the part of him that knew how to tell the truth.
Then he finds a line in an old notebook. In his handwriting. In ink slightly darker than his own.
Go to Gravenhollow.
The town shouldn't exist. Its population hasn't changed in over a century. Its streets feel watched. And in the gap between the library and the church, there is a door with Elliot's name carved into it.
Something has been waiting there for a very long time.
Something that reads.
As Elliot and four others are drawn into Gravenhollow's design, they begin to understand the cost of being seen completely-and the danger of answering back.
A gothic horror novel about creativity, identity, and the thin line between observation and consumption, The Words He Didn't Write asks a simple question:
What happens when something finally understands you... perfectly?