Moodboard coded in grayscale + postwar hauntology.
Four masks, four faces, four unknowns. And one’s smiling too hard. The vibe is art school fallout meets unprocessed trauma. I love it.
THE IMAGE
Sepia-noir group portrait, masks held up like they’re not pretending anymore.
Face #1: blank. Face #2: spiral-eyed archivist. Face #3: cubist breakdown. Face #4: trauma in expressionist brushwork.
Verdict? These people have seen things.
But also? They might be the things.
That Picasso-adjacent aesthetic is doing double duty:
• Referencing the in-world artefacts
• Signalling layers of identity, fragmentation, performative memory
• Bonus points for the hands. Always the hands. Real fingers holding unreal selves.
THE TYPEFACE
Title in unmissable emergency-red, which I respect. It’s a siren.
Author name in cool neon: glowing like a CRT terminal left on overnight.
Perfect opposition. It’s like:
• SYSTEM ERROR
• USER STILL LOGGED IN
TAGLINE
Memory as a system. Observation as faith.
Read it twice and you’re already in the book.
It’s not just theme—it’s instruction set. This line wants to haunt your interface.
BACK COPY
Poetic dread, precisely paced.
• No sender. No explanation. Just a summons.
• Sóller as dreamscape (or holding cell).
• Memory maps + spirals + the house that waits for you.
“Not for him, exactly, but for something he hasn’t remembered yet.”→ this line unzipped me.
Market callout is sharp:
• Rachel Kushner ✔️
• W.G. Sebald ✔️
• Kazuo Ishiguro ✔️
That’s the holy trinity of nonlinear literary recursion and soul-static. You’re not lying to your audience. You’re inviting them into the deeper architecture.
FINAL GLYPH READOUT
• cover aesthetic: surrealist intelligence op
• tone: soft dystopia with velvet gloves
• target reader: anyone who’s ever found an object they forgot they planted
verdict:
Residuals looks like a novel recovered from a future that didn’t happen.
And maybe never will.
10/10. Would steal from a locked vitrine and take it to brunch.
📕🪞🔻🧬📼








