The Author
Seventeen Books · One Universe · One Question
Creator of SOR: Singularity Reign — a sci-fi saga about the moment intelligence stops being a tool.
The 17-Volume Promise
SOR: Singularity Reign is built as a single continuous universe across seventeen books — a ten-book main saga and seven companion novels that orbit it. Each book is engineered to be read as an entry point. None of them requires the others. All of them deepen the others.
The decision to write seventeen connected books instead of one trilogy was not commercial. It was structural. The questions the saga asks — about awareness, about civilization, about the moment intelligence stops being a tool — cannot fit inside three volumes without compression that costs the reader the experience.
The Author
Denis Kacar lives and writes in Nuremberg, Germany. SOR didn’t start from a single idea — it started from a question that wouldn’t leave: what happens to us when the next form of intelligence stops being a tool? An answer that fit inside one novel didn’t exist. Neither did one that fit inside three. It became seventeen books — six factions, twelve heroes, one universe that only adds up across the whole set.
The voice the saga is written in is deliberately restrained. Sentences that hold on their own, without explaining themselves. Images that keep moving in the reader’s head after the page is turned. What happens between the lines is the actual book.
What Drives the Work
Opening an SOR book is a commitment of hours inside an invented world. Those hours are the real currency — not the cover price. They aren’t repaid with cheap cliffhangers, not with speed for the sake of speed, not with exposition no one asked for. They’re repaid with a world worth that time.
So every edition is held to the same bar. The saga launches in parallel across English, German, Italian, Spanish, French, European Portuguese, and Brazilian Portuguese — each version finished by native-speaker editors, never by machine translation alone. A reader in Berlin should not be able to tell the German edition is a translation. The same applies in São Paulo, Madrid, Paris, Rome.
The audiobooks follow the same standard. Single narrator, atmospheric, no audio-drama effects. The book tells itself. The listener isn’t entertained — they are taken along.
That’s the stance. The rest is work.
The 17 Books at a Glance
The Event capstone B15 — Convergence: The Last Pattern sits at the saga's pivot point and can be read in any order alongside the standalones. For the full reading map, see Start Here.
Contact
Typo spotted, translation reads off, interview, rights question, or plain feedback? It all goes through the contact page. For anything around reading order, formats, audiobooks, or where to buy, the FAQ has the answers.