Worlds Apart blends psychological tension, multiverse scope, institutional corruption, and lunar noir to explore what happens when reality splits, and people must choose which truth to believe.
Below are the major themes that define the novel and shape the emotional core of the story.
At its heart, Worlds Apart questions whether we can trust what we see.
Across both narratives:
medications distort perception
hallucinations may be warnings
messages appear where logic says they shouldn’t
people disappear between realities
memories become unreliable
Peter’s story forces a deeper question:
If your mind is controlled, is anything you experience truly yours?
Marsh’s journey shows the opposite:
If your reality is full of lies, perception becomes your only compass.
Together, their arcs collide into one theme, truth is fragile.
The world of Worlds Apart is built on systems failing from within:
psychiatric institutions that mask political agendas
medication laws enforced through manipulation
lunar colonies overtaken by criminal networks
law enforcement riddled with corruption
government agencies driven by secrecy, not safety
Characters repeatedly discover that the systems designed to protect them are the ones causing harm.
Much of the narrative is driven by:
loved ones missing
the need to recover what was taken
following clues that defy logic
questioning whether the missing are alive at all
confronting the truth about what happened to them
For Marsh, Ellen is the personal anchor.
For Peter, it’s Ali, the wife he believed dead.
Their stories intertwine into one repeating question:
Who do we become when the person we love vanishes?
Across every world, trust breaks before it forms.
Characters face:
allies who lie
leaders who manipulate outcomes
criminals who pretend to offer truth
partners who keep secrets to protect themselves
institutions that betray their populations
Even friendship is unstable, because truth is split between worlds.
Survival in Worlds Apart isn’t just physical.
It’s:
keeping sanity in uncertainty
navigating impossible choices
accepting conflicting timelines
confronting trauma shaped by systems
resisting psychological manipulation
Peter’s internal war becomes just as dangerous as Marsh’s external one.
The novel plays with:
reality branching
versions of the same world shaped by choices
places that never existed coexisting with familiar ones
timelines that intersect without warning
people who appear in multiple “versions” of themselves
This creates a layered, shifting sense of world that mirrors the characters’ inner instability.
Who controls reality?
Governments?
Criminal networks?
Institutions?
Medication?
Perception?
Or something deeper?
Every revelation strips away a layer of control until the truth becomes undeniable:
The world is only stable for those who designed it.
Everyone else is fighting not to be erased.