The Kickstarter Prelaunch is HERE!

I’ve spent 22 years building this universe. That’s not marketing hyperbole—I mean literally two decades of character development, world-building, and turning real events into mythology. The Legendary started as superhero fiction and somewhere along the way it became something bigger. It became proof that even the most broken among us might be worth loving.
The characters in this book are based on real people. Friends I’ve known for over 20 years from a gaming community that became family. People who stuck around through my darkest times and somehow saw something worth saving. I’ve given them powers, put them in impossible situations, and watched them choose goodness even when the world gives them every reason not to.
Frank King (yeah, same name as me—I’m not subtle) is an archaeologist turned investigator who spent his whole life preparing for revenge only to have time steal that from him. Wynd is a goddess carrying the weight of accidentally destroying half a city. Kenyana Thompson had her life’s work stolen by the government before she turned 20. Take is a half-demon martial artist raised who has to choose good over evil every single day.
These aren’t just characters. They’re people. And their stories deserve more than cookie-cutter publishing.
Why Kickstarter? Why Not Just Self-Publish?
Because Kickstarter lets me do this right.
On Amazon, I can sell you a basic paperback for fifteen bucks. Print-on-demand, unsigned, mass-market. And that’s fine—that book will be there on March 1st for anyone who wants it.
But Kickstarter is where the exclusive stuff lives. The signed hardcovers with unique sketch cover art designed for coloring. The metal Plague Breaker badge pins. The character art prints. The trading card bookmarks featuring the Legion members. All the collector’s items that won’t exist anywhere else.
More importantly, Kickstarter lets me build this with you instead of for you.
Traditional publishing means handing your work to gatekeepers who decide if your story is “marketable.” Self-publishing means guessing what readers want and hoping you got it right. Kickstarter means showing you exactly what I’m building and asking: “Are you in?”
If you back the campaign, you’re not just pre-ordering a book. You’re investing in proof that I can produce something real. You’re supporting 22 years of character development finally seeing daylight. You’re saying that stories about broken people choosing goodness deserve to exist.