πΊπΈ The Great American Novel
Every generation tries to write it. This one may have written you first.
The Great American Novel is less a book than a mirror held up to a nation unraveling in recursive headlines, media static, and haunted promises. Itβs Whitman with Wi-Fi, Melville with metadata, Kerouac spliced into quantum film reels. A chorus of ghosts β political, personal, algorithmic β all trying to sing the same anthem and never quite on key.
It is satire and elegy, a story and a system, a novel that insists America itself has become a genre. Somewhere between scripture and substack, between protest sign and love letter, the text fractures into the only thing left: a great American echo.