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Chronic Fatigue
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Chronic Fatigue

6 Chapters
Author:Ananth Van Der Lekh
Status:ongoing
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Synopsis

Book 2 of the series In Search of Truth and Beauty What if someone was interfering with your dreams? Why do dreams seem to tell stories over which we have no conscious control? Who decides what gets into our dreams...    ...and what gets out?  What if the line between stories and reality blurs? If our own story was told would we really be the character we think we are? Who says that our personal perspective of reality is the only one...    ... or the real one? What if travelling in time was possible for you? When would you go and would you be able to get back? If you met yourself would it really be you...    ...or another person very like you? Follow Chronic Fatigue: To See How Far the Human Mind Can Stretch  When the limits of perception and fatigue collide, the result is a tangled mess of confusion and clarity. In Chronic Fatigue, characters push their mental boundaries to the breaking point, testing how much the mind can endure before it fractures. Because Time Doesn’t Work the Way You Think It Does Forget what you know about linear time. In this world, events fold in on themselves, creating layers of reality that leave the reader - and the characters - scrambling to keep up. The nature of time itself becomes a puzzle with no easy solution. To Explore the Beauty of Confusion In the dizzying swirl of events, exhaustion, and disorientation, there’s a strange kind of beauty that emerges. Chronic Fatigue invites you to embrace the disarray and find meaning in the chaos, proving that sometimes confusion is just another form of understanding. Read book 1 of the series - Temporal Tantrums By way of explanation: Dr. Cebusovich seems to have absconded, much to the relief of everyone involved, after having insisted on providing chapter introductions despite never having been officially employed for the task. Readers though, have come to expect some sort of introduction now, and so, at short notice, we are pleased to announce that Mrs. Mavis McAckroyd, a retired literary reviewer, has graciously agreed to step in. While Mrs. McAckroyd may not entirely align with the more modern aspects of the book, we are confident her seasoned perspective will offer an introduction that, though perhaps a bit removed from the book’s intended tone, will nonetheless be a welcome change.