Transgressive Fiction

Not all stories are meant to be comfortable.

These novels explore the darker edges of human behaviour—obsession, violence, desire and the things people justify when they think they’re right.

This is transgressive fiction.
It doesn’t look away.


Muslamic Ray Gun

He was shaped by what he was taught.
Defined by what he became.

Andy Huxtable found purpose in extremism—first on the fringes, then at its violent core. It gave him identity. It gave him direction.

It also took everything else.

Prison forces him to confront the truth behind it all: how easily people can be moulded, and how far that can go.

But when he’s released, understanding isn’t enough.

There’s a daughter who doesn’t know him. A past that won’t let go. And a world that has already judged him.

Some paths are easy to follow.

Harder to come back from.


Maggie’s Children

Once a year, they come back together.
Every year, there’s less left of them.

A group of friends, bound by their past, meet up each year to relive who they used to be.

But time has a way of changing things.

Careers falter. Relationships break. Habits become dependencies. And one by one, the lives they imagined for themselves begin to slip away.

At the centre of it all is Saul Castle—watching, remembering, and trying to make sense of everything that’s happened.

Because the past doesn’t stay where it belongs.

And sometimes, it’s not one moment that ruins a life—

it’s all of them.


Besotted

He’s losing his future.
Then he starts losing everything else.

Benjamin Beerenwinkel is a writer with a failing marriage and a diagnosis that changes everything.

As his life begins to unravel, so does his sense of right and wrong. What starts as distraction becomes obsession. What feels like connection becomes something far more complicated—and far more dangerous.

The closer he gets to the edge, the harder it is to see it.

Because not everything that feels real can be trusted.

And not every boundary is meant to be crossed.


Putrid Underbelly

He’s seen how life ends.
Now he can’t stop watching it happen.

After a devastating loss, journalist Rob Murgatroyd finds himself drawn to the most disturbing material the internet has to offer—footage of real death, real suffering, real final moments.

It should repel him.

Instead, it pulls him in.

What begins as a need to understand becomes something darker. A search that leads him beyond the surface, into a world where violence is not just observed—but created, controlled, and sold.

And once he crosses that line—

there’s no clear way back.