
The shadow moved faster than its owner, shaped by worry. When trust appeared, the shadow slowed and returned.
About the Creator
Keep reading
More stories from GoldenSpeech and writers in BookClub and other communities.
Rachel Reviews: Lakefront Wolves by Joseph Deegan
Meet Finn. He's an 18 year old kid who has potential. He's bright with great school scores and he's also an athlete, a footballer of some prowess. He has it all going for him, it would seem, and yet, he's determined to send what could be a well-planned, stable existence firmly off the rails. He drinks, he smokes, he takes drugs, he has violent tendencies and he's in danger of losing not only his mind but all that he holds dear.
By Rachel Deeming8 days ago in BookClub
The Miscommunication Trilogy
Conspiracy Completed: Language on Trial Peter Ayolov in The Conspiracy of Speech, Vol. I (2026) opens THE MISCOMMUNICATION TRILOGY with a book that reads less like a single argument than like a deliberately constructed pressure system: language is placed under historical, biological, social, and moral stress until its everyday ‘normality’ begins to look like the strangest thing humans ever agreed to treat as obvious. The volume’s four-part architecture matters because it stages a descent, not into silence, but into the conditions that make silence desirable again. If the trilogy promises two future movements, The Entropy of Communication, Vol. II and The Tower of Babble, Vol. III, this first volume functions as the founding diagnosis: before one can speak about entropy or babble, one has to show how speech itself can become conspiratorial even when nobody is ‘conspiring’ in the cinematic sense. That conceptual move is the book’s signature: conspiracy is widened from clandestine plotting into the deeper fact that language is coalition-forming, status-sensitive, power-bearing, and therefore structurally vulnerable to capture, ritualisation, and decay. Volume I is not only an inquiry into how communication fails; it is also a study in how modern societies normalise failure and rename it ‘connectivity’, ‘engagement’, or ‘participation’. The result is a text that positions miscommunication not as an accident that interrupts the system, but as a systemic product that can be manufactured, rewarded, and reproduced with industrial efficiency.
By Peter Ayolov3 days ago in BookClub



Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.