1. Pearl
Core frame: WWII bomber crew receives a sentient/anachronistic plane (Pearl) embedded with future tech.
Themes/Concepts:
Memory & haunting: the bomber becomes a vessel for nonlinear memory, an archive resisting erasure.Anachronism & recursion: future tech in the 1940s disrupts causality, creating metafictional bleed.War trauma & refusal: Pearl encodes refusal against war, death, historical amnesia.Objects as time-carriers: the Pearl Archive (OYSTERLIGHT) extends meaning across decades.Signature motif: The sentient machine as memory-carrier.
2. Tyrant
Core frame: A T***p-like populist (Cardinal) and his AI deepfake successor (Cincinnatus) preside over America’s collapse, driven by Russian mafia-man Vescovi and billionaire tech-bros like Zane Parallax.
Themes/Concepts:
Collapse & parody: grotesque satire of late-capitalist governance, staged through sins (lust, greed, pride…).AI & deepfake sovereignty: governance outsourced to algorithms, reality replaced by spectacle.Crypto-fascism: CardinalCoin, Homeland Light, loyalty scores—systems of control masquerading as tech fixes.Memetic rebellion: satire, TikTok, and leaks destabilise power.Signature motif: Populist collapse as a media-deepfake carnival.
3. Numbers for God
Core frame: Josh, trapped in corporate purgatory, endures bosses who embody Dante’s terraces; fragments of an Elliott 503 emulator reveal a deprecated god-logic.
Themes/Concepts:
Corporate-theological recursion: God as outdated code, running in forgotten emulators.Workplace satire: bosses as sins, tech culture as ritual punishment.Residual divinity: deprecated logic, small data, ghost systems resisting optimisation.Exile: Josh as unwilling pilgrim through recursive corporate hells.Signature motif: God as legacy software, trapped in corporate recursion.
4. Residuals
Core frame: Josh arrives in Sóller, Spain, slowly realising he’s Farallon, inducted into the Watchers alongside Elsa and Zane.
Themes/Concepts:Induction & doubling: Josh is not narrator but point of entry; Farallon emerges.
Memory & art: Can Prunera, Miró, Picasso—artifacts as triggers for metaphysical recognition.
Surveillance & presence: Watchers observe, induct, alter the terms of agency.
Gravity & recursion: the novel folds time/identity, layering surreal intimacy over cosmic stakes.Signature motif: The moment of induction—when a human realises they’re more than themselves.
5. The Watcher
Core frame: Cosmic Watchers oversee the universe’s 13-billion-year history, debating interventions (Darnell, Lepton, Limantour, etc.).
Themes/Concepts:
Cosmological satire: myth, physics, and theology refracted through dry Watcher banter.Intervention vs. observation: whether to alter Earth’s path or remain detached. Human emotion as loud.Recursive history: agriculture, warfare, religion seen as Watcher-seeded interventions.Metafictional cosmology: the Watchers as allegory for writers, gods, systems.Signature motif: Cosmic bureaucracy debating when to intervene.
6. Pulse
Core frame: Continuation into a future where Scrive, Nathan (ex-Zane/Drake), Elsa, Sheri, Limantour etc. operate across biotech, espionage, and mythology.
Themes/Concepts:Biotech & ethics: Biotree, molecular robots, tropus, N3Ro cartridges as control vs. vision.
Identity versions: Scrive, Nathan, Limantour cycle through names/selves, haunted by earlier iterations.
Espionage recursion: drops, traces, vintage backchannels colliding with myth zones (Australia).
The blind spot: Ellipse/Tract cannot see everything—hidden geographies, Australia as Watcher-myth bleed.
Signature motif: Biotech espionage uncovering myth-blind zones.
Across the cycle as a whole
Memory as resistance: whether in Pearl’s archives, Numbers’ emulators, or Watcher cosmologies, memory defies erasure.
Obsolete tech as divine residue: analogue radios, Elliott 503s, Cold War consoles — conduits for ghosts.Recursion & doubling: identities shift (Josh/Farallon/Scrive; Zane/Drake/Nathan), time loops back.
· A Place for Emotion: intimacy, care, and grief — grounds the machinery, as seen in the relationships between Sheri and Nathan, Josh and Elsa, Scrive and Charlie, reminding us that the systems are human before they collapse.
· Collapse of authority: from wartime states to Cardinal’s AI to Biotree — systems fracture, leaving space for watchers, rebels, archives.
· The myth bleed: zones of refusal (OYSTERLIGHT artifacts, Australia) where narrative and reality glitch.
And 'Thanks to Steve' for suggesting additional artefacts:
1) The reviews – which from my lovely ARC readers are in the back of some novels. I may also publish as a set if I can think how to do it.
2) Jellyfish are loading their guns – the world view thesaurus (not yet ready). Another kind of fire hazard.
3) A stripped back compendium – minus the entire Elliott 503 sequence and other edits so that it reads like another ‘Brane’ (alternate worldview/parallel universe).
4) Busy Spirals play – This one runs alongside the novels but keeps its feet firmly on the ground. Six characters — a manager, a worker, a freelancer, a spouse, a young worker, an elder — carry us from the 1950s to the 2030s. The world changes around them: offices become inboxes, inboxes become apps, families juggle the overload, and everyone keeps busy. It’s funny, sharp, sometimes bleak. The same themes as the books — systems, recursion, memory — but played out in a single day, a working week, a lifetime. If the novels ask how war, corporations, and gods collapse, Busy Numbers asks what happens when the thing that rules us all is absorbed by… busyness. The play’s signature motif: busyness as the ultimate system — ordinary, endless, impossible to escape.
So we get…{Fanfare}
(a framework of six novels)
At the core of these novels lies a single question: what survives when systems built to dominate—war, corporations, governments, gods—collapse or erase memory?
Each book stands alone, yet together they form a cycle about resistance, recursion, emotion and memory in an age of encapsulating systems.
Unifying arc
Across the six novels, memory resists erasure. Obsolete tech (radios, Elliott emulators, Cold War consoles) becomes sacred residue. Characters fracture into versions of themselves, moving across war, collapse, corporate purgatory, cosmology, and biotech espionage.
The cycle insists that systems always fail, but traces remain—in archives, myths, artefacts, names. Survival is not victory but refusal—the carrying forward of fragments against erasure.
My marketing blurb is evolving:
A six-book cycle by Ed Adams.
For fans of Thomas Pynchon, Don DeLillo, Joan Didion, William Gibson, and Rachel Kushner, this cycle of novels bends history, technology, and myth into a single, recursive arc. Each book stands alone; together, they map a hidden history spanning all of time, yet lingering most in the 20th and 21st centuries —where memory itself is the battlefield.
And breathe… if you made it this far, you’re flame-proof. The Archive has you now — eternal, indexed, impossible to erase. This is how we endure.

