Every journey needs a beginning, even if the road has already been walking beside you for years. This page is a small lantern — just enough light to see the shape of the path ahead.
The Two Books
The Road to Now Here and The Road to Every Where form a diptych — two movements of a single story, each answering the other across time.
One book moves with the raw immediacy of youth: fast, bright, and close to the bone. The other walks more slowly, carrying the weight of memory and the strange clarity that comes with distance.
You can read them in either order. Most readers begin with Now Here, because it opens the road at its youngest point. Others begin with Every Where and enjoy the way the past echoes backward.
If You're Unsure Where to Begin
Start with The Road to Now Here if you want:
— immediacy
— friendship under pressure
— the sharp edges of becoming
— the sense that the world is larger than it admits
Start with The Road to Every Where if you want:
— memory
— consequence
— crossings and thresholds
— the quiet strangeness that follows us home
How the Two Roads Speak to Each Other
The books are not sequels. They are reflections — two angles on the same long road.
Characters reappear, but changed. Events echo, but differently. The impossible flickers at the edge of the map, but never in the same way twice.
Read together, they form a single arc: the self that lived, and the self that remembers, leaving each other lights along the way.
Where to Go Next
When you're ready, choose a road:
The Road to Now Here →
The Road to Every Where →
Or, if you'd like to hold the books in your hands: