Jay Hyx
Jay Hyx writes at the collision point of ancient traditions and far-future speculation. Cultivation systems, rogue AIs, corporate noir — if a world has rules worth breaking, he'll build a character who breaks them and makes you feel every step of it.
The debut series Divine Meridians of the Phoenix fuses xianxia martial-arts philosophy with hard sci-fi: a martial artist sleeps for six centuries, wakes up in 2642, and discovers his chi is the most dangerous thing in the known universe.
The rest of the catalog goes wider: sardonic space operas, DJ thrillers, a corporate janitor hiding a lethal martial art behind a mop bucket. The genre changes. The intention doesn't — hit hard, hit wide, leave a mark. Audiobook is the primary format; print ships first.
Works by Jay Hyx

Atlas Adrift
“A traumatized captain hides in his cabin while his crew runs the ship without him — until a territorial standoff forces the lie into the open.”

Duct Tape & Cluckwork Orange
“A cynical repairman, a fire-breathing rooster, and three incompatible philosophies collide over a failing dam in the post-apocalyptic wasteland.”

The Shattered Crane
“A rat who narrates life like a noir detective discovers the humans he watches are headed for a deadly climax — and his vantage point might be the only thing that saves them.”

ARAI
“The universe has an operating system. Enlightenment is the login.”

