In the spirit of THE TWILIGHT ZONE and BLACK MIRROR, PATCH NOTES presents seven cosmic horror stories following The Being—an exhausted administrator trying to keep the universe from crashing.
Reality is glitching. Someone has to patch it.
In a universe managed like enterprise software, the cosmic IT helpdesk struggles to maintain stability as reality itself begins to break down. Through seven interconnected stories told via patch notes, witness the desperate attempts to fix an imperfect universe held together with duct tape and determination.
When reality starts glitching, The Being deploys emergency rolling back timelines, load-balancing dimensions, and patching cosmic exploits. But each fix creates new problems, and the cracks are spreading faster than they can be repaired.
Terrifying, funny, and intelligent. Episodic storytelling for fans who binged Black Mirror and want more mind-bending tech horror.
Perfect for readers who love Lovecraft's existential dread meets IT culture's dark humor.
Reality is being held together with duct tape and desperation.
Jerome Pinkney spent years analyzing classified intel as an Army veteran and over two decades working in IT systems and security. Now he writes science fiction about what happens when reality itself becomes classified information.
THE EPSILON SHIFT is his debut quantum thriller: A woman with perfect memory discovers that a shadow organization is rewriting history. She can save herself by accepting the lie, or she can destroy everything by revealing the truth.
Drawing on his experience with both intelligence operations and complex systems, Jerome writes hard science fiction where consequences are permanent and truth is weaponized. His work sits at the intersection of Blake Crouch's Dark Matter and Ted Chiang's philosophical depth.
Book 2, THE MERGE: REALITY WALKERS, launches November 2025.
He doesn't write escapist sci-fi. He authors stories about guilt, power, and the devastating cost of certainty. If that's your thing, you're in the right place.
If you are either working in IT, are a developer or system admin - or are fortunate to face regular struggles in your everyday life, this one is for you.
Imagine everyday life issues but make it bigger. I mean *really big*. Humankind size of big. You cannot delay any defects or bugs. You need to patch them without allowing time for testing. And when you do that, things go wrong. More than wrong :) So you need to patch it again, and again. At the end of the day, it becomes an endless cycle and if you are lucky, the remaining issues are minor. Or are they?
I had a lot of fun with this one. It got me entertained and if you enjoy the suffering of IT with a dose of Black Mirror sprinkled on top, you will enjoy this also.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.