
The Book of Us
by Chandra Jordan

An examination of consciousness shaped under pressure. It treats love as capacity, not romance; survival as intelligence, not trauma; and observation as power. The narrator does not seek validation, forgiveness, or understanding. She documents patterns, in people, systems, relationships, and herself to show how awareness is formed, misused, refined, and finally reclaimed. The tone is lucid, controlled, intimate without pleading, and unsentimental without cruelty. Meaning is trusted to land