The Sky Above is a standalone science-fiction novel exploring isolation, memory, and the fragile boundary between survival and surrender.
Set in a confined and hostile environment, the story follows a protagonist forced to confront both external danger and the psychological consequences of prolonged isolation. As routine becomes ritual and time begins to lose its shape, certainty erodes and perception shifts, raising unsettling questions about control, choice, and what it means to remain human under extreme conditions.
The Sky Above blends speculative science fiction with psychological tension, focusing less on technology itself than on its impact on the human mind. It is a restrained, character-driven novel about endurance, identity, and the quiet pressures that reshape us when escape is no longer an option.
The Sky Above
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I read The Sky Above recently and was struck by how real and unsettling it feels, even though it’s set in the real world and was clearly written before Covid. There’s no mention of the pandemic, but that doesn’t take anything away from the story — if anything, it makes the atmosphere feel even more eerie in hindsight. The tension builds naturally, the emotions feel genuine, and I stayed invested the whole way through. It’s intense, absorbing, and surprisingly relevant without trying to be.
I only read The Sky Above recently, long after its release, and that made it even more unsettling. The novel doesn’t include Covid or the war in Ukraine, but replaces them with an alternative global catastrophe that is just as terrifying—and disturbingly plausible. Rather than spectacle, it builds tension through psychology, moral pressure, and quiet dread. Thoughtful, intelligent sci-fi that feels eerily close to reality.