Born into a world he never asked to join, a young man wrestles with the quiet agony of existence. With sharp wit, poetic reflection, and an honesty that's almost dangerous, The Suicide Note is a raw and unfiltered journey through childhood isolation, social alienation, philosophical doubt, and the haunting simplicity of asking: why are we here?
Moving between memories and inner monologue, this novel holds up a mirror to society's expectations, education, work, marriage, success-and tears them down one by one. Through benches and matatus, gospel songs and silent rooms, the narrator reimagines meaning in a world where even the idea of happiness feels like a trap.
But when death becomes more than just an idea...when it starts to feel like a plan-he discovers something even more terrifying: there are still things he's not ready to leave behind.
A book for the thinkers, the wanderers, the almost-broken and the quietly observant, The Suicide Note is not just a story-it's a confrontation.