Works by Ozy Worldy
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Works by Ozy Worldy
𝔡𝔬𝔢𝔰 𝔦𝔱 𝔯𝔢𝔞𝔩𝔩𝔶 𝔪𝔞𝔱𝔱𝔢𝔯 𝔴𝔥𝔢𝔯𝔢 𝔱𝔥𝔦𝔫𝔤𝔰 𝔟𝔢𝔩𝔬𝔫𝔤?
Rejoice! Rejoice!
Let the bells ring out and the banners fly!
My novel comes out today!
To some, the return of magic is a miracle; to others, a catastrophe. For physicist Julia Chen, it’s all a colossal headache. Now, she’s setting out across the wintry, post-apocalyptic landscape of Fairy-occupied Canada in search of answers. The subject of her inquiries: an enigmatic Fae known only as Mr. Elsevier, who seems to have power over matter and energy at the most fundamental level and who is willing to share this knowledge—for a price. But Julia’s quest does not take place in a political vacuum. In Ottawa, the new Fairy Viceroy draws up her plans for the country, even as her puppet Prime Minister, Chuck Oakes, struggles desperately to protect his people. But rebellion is brewing, and Mr. Elsevier may just be the key to human victory. Now, with the murderous politics of the Fae heating up, Julia will soon learn that, in sorcery as in science, simple questions can sometimes have very dangerous answers. She is on the cusp of ultimate knowledge: a theory of magic that would explain what has become of the world and how it can be reversed. But asking the wrong question may well unravel reality itself...
Filled with, magic, dark humour and memorable characters, Reality's End is the first part of an epic science fantasy trilogy that you will not want to miss! Order your copy today!
(Amazon link for ebook & paperback) (Other platforms for ebook; or support me on Patreon)
(Read it serially on Royal Road or AO3)
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UPDATE: Now Available in PODCAST FORM!!!
Which sky is the prettiest?
Bright blue with no clouds at all
Stormy grey with flashes of lightning
Night sky lit up by city lights
Pale blue scattered with thin wispy white clouds
Clear starry night with a bright full moon
Clear starry night with a thin crescent moon
Orange sunrise
Bleak grey sky with no defined cloud shapes
Pink sunset
Deep indigo of a dawn sky
Rain clouds and partial blue sky, complete with rainbow
Cloudy sky with rays of sunlight piercing through
"Your pain is real, but it's not you."
Reflection: What Are We Really Measuring?
For most of human history, measuring time meant watching the sky.
Shadows moved across sundials. Water flowed through carefully shaped vessels. Pendulums swung back and forth.
Each generation created more precise clocks, but the basic assumption remained the same: clocks measure time.
Modern physics has complicated that idea.
Atomic clocks don’t measure something flowing past us. They measure extremely stable repeating patterns inside matter itself. Optical lattice clocks push that idea even further, counting oscillations of light and atoms with astonishing precision.
In other words, every clock is really measuring change.
A pendulum changes position. A crystal vibrates. An atom shifts between energy states.
If that’s true, then a deeper question emerges:
Is time something that exists independently…
Or is it something that emerges from patterns of change in the universe?
Humanity’s race to build ever more precise clocks may ultimately reveal something unexpected — that time is not simply a backdrop to reality, but a structure that arises from the relationships between events.
So here’s a thought worth sitting with:
If nothing in the universe changed — no motion, no interaction, no transformation — would time still exist?
Or does time only appear when something happens?