When I wrote Wonderment Within Weirdness, I knew I wanted a story that could stretch, expand, and ultimately explore just about everything. But at the time, I wasn’t fully conscious of all the layers and themes that would emerge. Now, looking back, I realize just how rich the book is thematically, and how much it resonates with ideas and feelings that exist in real life—ideas about conflict, about resilience, about morality, and about the way individuals navigate chaos.
At its core, the book is about a “regular guy” thrown into extraordinary circumstances, having to rise up to face a multiversal conflict that no one else sees, no one else believes in, and no one else can handle. That premise alone already sets the tone for several key themes: courage in the face of overwhelming odds, the moral responsibility of action, and the idea that even a single individual can make a difference when the system itself is incapable. These themes tie directly into broader ideas about resistance—resisting authoritarianism, resisting the collapse of society, resisting despair—and while the story operates on a multiversal, sci-fi scale, these themes remain grounded and relatable.
One of the most obvious thematic threads is the anti-war sentiment. It’s something I only fully recognized recently, especially given the current tensions around the Iran conflict and ongoing global instability. The story presents a world—or multiple worlds—where violence is the norm, where chaos grows unchecked, and yet it is through action, strategy, and resilience that meaningful change can be made. It is a story that, on its face, is absurd and fantastical, but the underlying message about the costs of conflict and the need for thoughtful intervention resonates with real-world issues. This anti-war thread also appears in my other works, from my poetry compilation My Powerful Poems to my short story collection Some Small Short Stories, but in Wonderment Within Weirdness it is front and center. The stakes are multiversal, but the message is clear: standing against destruction, against the unraveling of life itself, matters—even if it is not easy, even if it seems impossible, even if no one else sees what you see.
Another theme that runs through the book is resilience. Emotional resilience, mental resilience, and the refusal to give up even when things seem insurmountable are central to the story. James, our protagonist, faces overwhelming odds, and his journey is not just physical but also deeply psychological. He has to contend with loss, disorientation, the failure of systems around him, and the weight of choices that could ripple across entire universes. That emotional endurance is something many readers can relate to, whether it’s in dealing with personal challenges, societal instability, or the quiet, constant pressure of life. The narrative itself mirrors that experience, stretching moments of tension, playing with time in ways that make the reader feel the weight of each decision, each second, each choice. It’s about keeping moving forward even when the world—or multiverse—is collapsing around you.
Humor, absurdism, and a certain nihilistic lens also permeate the book. Inspired by Rick and Morty, Supernatural, and other absurdist media, the story frequently leans into sarcastic, sardonic, and sometimes dark humor. This gives the narrative a tone that balances the serious stakes with levity, and also allows for a kind of meta-commentary on the absurdity of existence and of conflicts, both personal and cosmic. There’s an interplay between high-stakes multiversal battles and irreverent, even ridiculous, situations that underscores the absurdity inherent in any struggle against forces beyond our full comprehension. The humor doesn’t diminish the weight of the story; it enhances it by showing how one can survive, mentally and emotionally, in the face of overwhelming chaos.
Science and theoretical ideas are also embedded into the story. Drawing from my background as a science major, the sci-fi elements of Wonderment Within Weirdness—from multiversal theories to portals and causal mechanics—are influenced by real science, though dramatized and exaggerated for narrative effect. This provides a framework for the story that makes the fantastic feel credible. Readers see worlds built with internal logic, and that grounding allows the absurd, the impossible, and the chaotic to land with weight. Similarly, influences from video games, anime, manga, comic books, and superhero movies show up in the pacing, in the stakes, and in how conflicts are framed. The story draws inspiration from the long-form character development of manga, the visual spectacle and tension of superhero movies, and the interactive, consequence-driven sensibilities of video games, giving it a hybrid style that feels familiar yet completely unique.
The scale of the story is another thematic and structural element. At over 600 pages, the debut novel is intentionally grand. Most first books aren’t structured this way; they are often more contained, more cautious. But Wonderment Within Weirdness had to lay the foundation for a sprawling universe, to establish stakes that could expand in later books, and to create a story that could stand on its own while also supporting a much larger narrative arc. That scale itself reinforces themes of responsibility, of acting within a system that is vast, complex, and imperfect. The multiverse in the story isn’t a clean, controlled environment; it is messy, sprawling, and full of hidden dangers. This allows for the idea that threats can grow unnoticed, that heroism can be invisible, and that meaningful action often happens quietly, behind the scenes, or in ways the system itself cannot track or contain.
At the same time, the book is deeply character-driven. James, Lucifer, and other characters are not archetypes; they are individuals with thoughts, emotions, and casual internal monologues. The first-person point-of-view style, switching between characters, creates a sense of intimacy while also emphasizing perspective. Everyone observes the world in their own casual, human way—trees are big and green, objects are described plainly—but the story’s scale, the stakes, and the multiversal chaos contrast sharply with this grounded, personal perspective. That juxtaposition itself is a theme: the human scale and the cosmic scale coexisting, and how human action matters even in an infinite, chaotic universe.
Another theme is moral agency. The book raises questions about how to confront threats, what methods are justified, and how personal experience and trauma influence decisions. Violence is used, yes, but not blindly; it is contextualized, weighed, and contrasted with other forms of action, particularly by characters like Lucifer who ultimately embody reflection and reasoning. In this sense, the book explores ethical dilemmas that are often abstract in science fiction and fantasy but grounded here in personal consequence, emotional struggle, and the narrative’s absurdist lens.
The story also contains meta-narrative and commentary on the nature of storytelling itself. The time distortions, flashbacks, and expanded sequences all highlight how stories can manipulate perception, stretch moments, and explore subjective experience. This allows readers to feel the pressure, tension, and weight of decisions in a very immediate way, mirroring the challenges faced by the characters. It’s a reflection of both narrative technique and thematic resonance: life, choice, and consequence are subjective, messy, and full of uncertainty.
Underlying everything is a theme of connection—between characters, across timelines, and through universes. Though the story deals with epic stakes, it is also about relationships, trust, loyalty, and the ways individuals band together against impossible odds. These connections are human, relatable, and grounding, even amidst absurd, cosmic chaos. They create stakes that are emotional as well as existential.
Finally, the book is a story about action and consequence in a chaotic world. It presents a universe where the system is vast, the threats are hidden, and yet individuals act with agency. Courage, responsibility, resilience, morality, humor, absurdism, science, culture, and connection—all these themes coexist in a single story, creating a debut novel that is unusual, complex, and thematically rich. It is a story that entertains, challenges, and encourages reflection on both personal and societal levels. And while it is absurd, funny, chaotic, and wild, it is also deeply human.
The richness of Wonderment Within Weirdness comes from this layering of themes, perspectives, influences, and scale. The book draws inspiration from anime, manga, comics, superhero films, sci-fi, absurdist humor, and existential philosophy while simultaneously presenting a deeply personal narrative of courage, responsibility, and moral reflection. The multiverse becomes a canvas for exploring resilience, anti-war sentiment, moral agency, and human connection, and the story’s scale allows for both cosmic spectacle and intimate, personal stakes to coexist.
It is rare for a debut novel to encompass so much, to be so deliberately ambitious, and yet still maintain humor, accessibility, and relatability. This is a story that is absurd, vast, funny, thought-provoking, emotional, and ultimately human. It’s a novel that could be read purely for entertainment, but for those who look deeper, it offers layers of thematic richness that are hard to find elsewhere. Wonderment Within Weirdness is an exploration of everything—chaos, morality, humor, connection, courage, resilience, and the infinite possibilities of choice in an unpredictable universe.