Über
Rachel’s work inhabits the fracture between perception and truth. She writes toward the moment when understanding becomes unbearable—where silence turns into evidence and containment fails. Her fiction rejects sentimentality and prettified realism, choosing instead to witness the unfiltered complexity of human experience: the mess, the control, the quiet brutality of being alive. Her prose is precise, restrained, and emotionally charged—architecture built to contain chaos. Through nonlinear structures and intimate psychological tension, she explores how order disguises decay, how empathy survives under antiseptic light, and how consciousness endures itself. Rachel’s stories don’t seek catharsis; they seek accuracy. To her, writing is not confession or comfort but an act of moral observation: the radical belief that to see clearly, without distortion, is a form of love.
