Coherence is a psychological horror novel about the seductive danger of making sense of everything.
Elias, a man driven by logic and order, moves into a quiet house hoping to escape the constant mental noise that has followed him his entire life. Soon, the house begins to respond to him-not with voices or apparitions, but with riddles. Each question he answers brings relief and clarity, while quietly taking something away: a memory, a space, a person he once trusted.
As Elias solves more of the house's puzzles, he realizes the questions are not tests, but transactions. The house does not want fear-it wants coherence. It listens, learns, and reshapes itself using Elias's explanations, justifications, and need for control. In giving the house structure, Elias begins to lose his own.
Haunted by the truth of a past relationship he tried to contain rather than love, Elias confronts a terrifying realization: the house is not a monster invading his life-it is a reflection of how he thinks. When he finally leaves, he discovers that silence is not freedom, and that coherence, once embraced, is difficult to unlearn.
In the end, Coherence asks a disturbing question:
if understanding everything requires erasing parts of ourselves and others,
is clarity worth the cost?