Predators and Prey is a two-part examination of power, extraction, and the psychological cost of awareness.
The first book analyzes predation as a structural logic rather than a moral deviation. Moving across biology, politics, economics, social relations, and extreme criminal forms, it reveals how asymmetry, dependency, and distance allow extraction to persist-often legally, often invisibly, often with consent.
The second book begins where critique usually ends. It explores what happens after clarity replaces belief. How individuals work without illusion, relate without fantasy, participate without faith, and construct meaning without promise inside systems that do not change simply because they are understood.
This is not a manifesto.
It offers no solutions, no optimism, no calls to action.
Instead, it maps how predation operates-and how life reorganizes itself once innocence is no longer available as shelter.
Written in a sober, analytical style, Predators and Prey is for readers interested in power, sociology, political psychology, and the quiet consequences of seeing clearly.
Some books explain the world.
This one explains what understanding does to the person who lives in it.