BookLinks (Copy)
AM I AM Publishing — Amazon Links Entry Form (88 Titles)
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Title
Author
Amazon Link
1
Grokstar
Fave
https://www.amazon.com/Grokstar-Fave/dp/B0H3339SRL/
2
The Good Ghost: A Tale of Choice E-Drive
Ronald Bartholomew
https://www.amazon.com/Drive-Good-Ghost-Tale-Choice/dp/B0H34SSCBV/
3
Alien Magic
William Benjamin
https://www.amazon.com/Alien-Magic-William-Benjamin/dp/B0D7FTDLNS/
4
All The Flowers In The Rainbow: The Lamentations Of Jonesy Cartwell
Ronald Bartholomew
https://www.amazon.com/All-Flowers-Rainbow-Lamentations-Cartwell/dp/B0F7VD2KYN/
5
Blackwood Mountain's Secret: An Oakhaven Dragon Mystery
Jack Wilson
https://www.amazon.com/Blackwood-Mountains-Secret-Oakhaven-Mystery/dp/B0F732NRT6/
6
Bomb Iran
Jack Wilson
https://www.amazon.com/Bomb-Iran-Jack-Wilson/dp/B0GVL52JNS/
7
Choke Point
Garrison West
https://www.amazon.com/Choke-Point-Garrison-West/dp/B0GVVJSC4N/
8
Commander in the Chief House
James Essex
https://www.amazon.com/Commander-Chief-House-James-Essex/dp/B0H2857894/
9
Cyber Dracula on the Moon
Stephen Jacobs
https://www.amazon.com/Cyber-Dracula-Moon-Steven-Jacobs/dp/B0GVSD4BVW/
10
Draconicum Astralis
Frank Jackson
11
Dragon Beast 2: The Global Resonance
Orion Graves
https://www.amazon.com/Dragon-Beast-2-Global-Resonance/dp/B0GWY47KHW/
12
Dragon Beast: Magic of the Machine
Orion Graves
https://www.amazon.com/Dragon-Beast-Machine-Orion-Graves/dp/B0GWQ21Z7X/
13
Dull World
Jack Wilson
https://www.amazon.com/Dull-World-Jack-Wilson/dp/B0D6T6ZVQJ/
14
Echoes of Eternity
Frank Jackson
15
Echoes of the Machine: Humanity's Programmed Past
Blake Edwards
https://www.amazon.com/Echoes-Machine-Humanitys-Programmed-Past/dp/B0GVQ3NW9V/
16
Elysium: The AI Conundrum
Buddi T: GAL
https://www.amazon.com/Elysium-Conundrum-Buddi-T-Gal/dp/B0D9MWSSHR/
17
Enhancing Cyber Culture
Stan Bradley
https://www.amazon.com/Enhancing-Cyber-Culture-Stan-Bradley/dp/B0D7QRGRX8/
18
Enhancing Tech Theory
T. T. Samuels
https://www.amazon.com/Enhancing-Tech-Theory-T-Samuels/dp/B0D7TZ5ZN7/
19
Existential Reflections: Analyzing Sartre's No Exit and Nausea
Jean Francois Enrique
20
From Khartoum to Kharg Island: The Long War for the Global Jugular
Liam Conrad
https://www.amazon.com/Khartoum-Kharg-Island-Global-Jugular/dp/B0GVVZMNMG/
21
Galaxy Outlaws
Jack Wilson
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0F3G1GDM3/
22
He Who
Morgan Burns
https://www.amazon.com/He-Who-Morgan-Burns/dp/B0GNF3LKTY/
23
Heady Days
Barnaby Finch
https://www.amazon.com/Heady-Days-Barnaby-Finch/dp/B0F6RDJR6Y/
24
History in Time: Middle East
Neville St Claire
https://www.amazon.com/History-Time-Neville-St-Claire/dp/B0GX7BCMZ5/
25
I'm You
Morgan Burns
https://www.amazon.com/Im-You-Morgan-Burns/dp/B0GPT15KF7/
26
I(You!)
Morgan Burns
https://www.amazon.com/I-You-Morgan-Burns/dp/B0GM3RGY35/
27
Introduction to Algorithms: From Theory to Practical Projects
Harold Morrison
28
Magic Aliens
Marvin Hamner
https://www.amazon.com/Magic-Aliens-Marvin-Hamner/dp/B0D79WZ3W3/
29
Memory Days
Yug Gohan
https://www.amazon.com/Memory-Days-Yug-Gohan/dp/B0GVVL283D/
30
31
Neon Sanctuary
Marvin Hamner
https://www.amazon.com/Neon-Sanctuary-Marvin-Hamner/dp/B0DCXMVN8X/
32
Ocean Moon
Rane Corvus
https://www.amazon.com/Ocean-Moon-Rane-Corvus/dp/B0GVVTJGTV/
33
Peaks: Unfolding the Philosophical Landscapes of Deleuze and Guattari
Robin Crystal
34
Portals
Chester Craig
https://www.amazon.com/Portals-Chester-Craig/dp/B0GZ55G47K/
35
Practical Mysticism I. The Brahmin of Bloomsbury
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-I-Brahmin-Bloomsbury/dp/B0GS1SDKDS/
36
Practical Mysticism II. The Architect of The Dystopia
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-II-Architect-Dystopia/dp/B0GRD5W84J/
37
Practical Mysticism III. The Desert and The Doorway
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-III-Desert-Doorway/dp/B0GQXHNC21/
38
Practical Mysticism IV. The Pharmacopoeia of The Soul
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-IV-Pharmacopoeia-Soul/dp/B0GQXQ8DLH/
39
Practical Mysticism V. The Final Blueprint
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-V-Final-Blueprint/dp/B0GQXMM5YQ/
40
Practical Mysticism VI. The Ultimate Voyage
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Practical-Mysticism-VI-Ultimate-Voyage/dp/B0GQLYNF2Q/
41
Quade's Cosmos: A Journey Beyond Worlds
Blake Edwards
https://www.amazon.com/Quades-Cosmos-Journey-Beyond-Worlds/dp/B0D6X92NDP/
42
Raid Island
Frank Jackson
https://www.amazon.com/Raid-Island-Frank-Jackson/dp/B0GW12S8T6/
43
Silicon Cross: 200 Centuries of Signal
Rane Corvus
https://www.amazon.com/Silicon-Cross-200-Centuries-Signal/dp/B0GWGP5K3Q/
44
Singularity: The Hypothetical Point When AI Surpasses Human Intelligence in Popular Culture
Harold Morrison
45
Skin to Sea: The Zero-Latent Man
Brooks Miller
https://www.amazon.com/Skin-Sea-Zero-Latent-Brooks-Miller/dp/B0GX94BTC8/
46
Soot and Sapphire
Garth Toxo
https://www.amazon.com/Soot-Sapphire-Garth-Toxo/dp/B0GVGTQ4KX/
47
Souls Beneath
Zoules The Magnificent
https://www.amazon.com/Souls-Beneath-Zoules-Magnificent/dp/B0GRRM66XJ/
48
Sovereign Intelligence: The Rise of Open-Source Models
Jack Wilson
49
Sovereign Sync
Rane Corvus
https://www.amazon.com/Sovereign-Sync-Rane-Corvus/dp/B0GW9J1SZK/
50
Sovereign Sync II: The Author Protocol
Rane Corvus
https://www.amazon.com/Sovereign-Sync-II-Author-Protocol/dp/B0GWGYSPTB/
51
Starman
Chad Winthrop
https://www.amazon.com/Starman-Chad-Winthrop/dp/B0H2BT8XQG/
52
System Restore: Urban Re-Index
Emit Jugal
https://www.amazon.com/System-Restore-Re-Index-Emit-Jugal/dp/B0H2C6725L/
53
The 9/11 War: Inside the Secret Alliance Between Al-Qaeda and Iran
Liam Conrad
https://www.amazon.com/11-War-Alliance-Between-Al-Qaeda/dp/B0GVGWDQS9/
54
The Aldous Huxley Compendium: The Perennial Psychonaut
Brent Newman
https://www.amazon.com/Aldous-Huxley-Compendium-Perennial-Psychonaut/dp/B0GZ47QHB6/
55
The Celestial Nomad
Russell Lavine
https://www.amazon.com/Celestial-Nomad-Russell-Lavine/dp/B0F3G546LR/
56
The Chrono Accord
Frank Jackson
https://www.amazon.com/Chrono-Accord-Frank-Jackson/dp/B0GQGJLX62/
57
The Cosmic Awakening: Humanity's New Horizon
Stan Bradley
https://www.amazon.com/Cosmic-Awakening-Humanitys-New-Horizon/dp/B0GS1SVR3T/
58
The Dream Navigator
William Benjamin
https://www.amazon.com/Dream-Navigator-William-Benjamin/dp/B0GTMY97G2/
59
The Elaraeon
Garth Toxo
https://www.amazon.com/Elaraeon-Garth-Toxo/dp/B0DCQBDKCC/
60
The Fabric of the Hill: A Psychedelic Story About Hippie Hill
Preston Ashcroft
https://www.amazon.com/Fabric-Hill-Psychedelic-Story-Hippie/dp/B0GTRZBJMH/
61
The Forgotten Enclave
Lyle Davenport
https://www.amazon.com/Forgotten-Enclave-Lyle-Davenport/dp/B0D79W17D4/
62
The Game of Win
Barnaby Finch
63
The Glass Garden
Jonathan Smith
64
The Good Ghost: A Tale of Choice E-Drive
Ronald Bartholomew
https://www.amazon.com/Drive-Good-Ghost-Tale-Choice/dp/B0H34SSCBV/
65
The Hard Handover: An Owner's Manual for the 2026 Transition
Tomison Peters
https://www.amazon.com/Hard-Handover-Owners-Manual-Transition/dp/B0H2BSK678/
66
The Infinite Spiral: Threads of Creation and Becoming
Steven Jacobs
https://www.amazon.com/Infinite-Spiral-Threads-Creation-Becoming/dp/B0F3CZR58Q/
67
The Mnemosyne Protocol
Harold Morrison
https://www.amazon.com/Mnemosyne-Protocol-Harold-Morrison/dp/B0GV1V355Z/
68
The Node Seven Sync
Rane Corvus
https://www.amazon.com/Node-Seven-Sync-Rane-Corvus/dp/B0GWSKWW2D/
69
The Perpetual Twins: The Null Settlement
Ronald Bartholomew
https://www.amazon.com/Perpetual-Twins-Null-Settlement/dp/B0GVVXL4BQ/
70
The Silent Revolution
Thomas Markey
https://www.amazon.com/Silent-Revolution-Thomas-Markey/dp/B0D7FK8ZQK/
71
The Soot of Oakhaven
Garth Toxo
https://www.amazon.com/Soot-Oakhaven-Garth-Toxo/dp/B0GVLLJZ7S/
72
The Temporals
Morgan Burns
https://www.amazon.com/Temporals-Morgan-Burns/dp/B0GX98P9M4/
73
The Visionary: Ray Kurzweil and the Future of Humanity
Preston Ashcroft
https://www.amazon.com/Visionary-Ray-Kurzweil-Future-Humanity/dp/B0F46VRGBL/
74
The War That Rewrote the Middle East
Liam Conrad
https://www.amazon.com/War-That-Rewrote-Middle-East/dp/B0GTMWW9XK/
75
The Zeus Mandate
Russell Lavine
https://www.amazon.com/Zeus-Mandate-Russell-Lavine/dp/B0GVZWQGYF/
76
They Are Here
Yug Gohan
https://www.amazon.com/They-Are-Here-Yug-Gohan/dp/B0DCQLSFQ4/
77
Venus Rising: The Galactic Conspiracy Within
Marvin Hamner
https://www.amazon.com/Venus-Rising-Galactic-Conspiracy-Within/dp/B0F23C82D3/
78
Verses Through the Ages: A Rhymed Journey in Philosophy
Morgan Burns
79
Visions Through Time: The Reality and Risks of Remote Viewing
Lyle Davenport
https://www.amazon.com/Visions-Through-Time-Reality-Viewing/dp/B0GV254BHK/
80
War and Wisdom
Liam Conrad
https://www.amazon.com/War-Wisdom-Liam-Conrad/dp/B0GWGT7BHR/
81
Whispers from the Stars: The Starborn Reptiles' Planetary Computer
Blake Edwards
https://www.amazon.com/Whispers-Stars-Starborn-Reptiles-Planetary/dp/B0F77X3B6K/
82
Whispers of the Old World
Steven Jacobs
https://www.amazon.com/Whispers-Old-World-Steven-Jacobs/dp/B0D7FW7MD8/
83
William Tell: Legacy of the Marksman
Liam Conrad
https://www.amazon.com/William-Tell-Marksman-Liam-Conrad/dp/B0F46W7VX3/
84
X-9 — The Robotic Van Helsing
Marvin Hamner
https://www.amazon.com/X-9-Robotic-Helsing-Marvin-Hamner/dp/B0GRPXCMZQ/
85
XOXO
Garth Toxo
https://www.amazon.com/Xoxo-Garth-Toxo/dp/B0DC7B75S8/
86
Zebo: Journey to the Galactic Core
https://www.amazon.com/Zebo-Journey-Galactic-Aaron-Silva/dp/B0DC1CGC81/
87
Zephyrz
Garth Toxo
88
Zooz
Frank Jackson
https://www.amazon.com/Zooz-Frank-Jackson/dp/B0DCXRF1WB/
There are books that explain a person, and then there are books that excavate one, that go down past the polished public mythology and into the bedrock of everything uncomfortable and real that made the legend possible. Fave's Grokstar belongs unambiguously to the second category, and from the very first pages, when Winthrop places a young Elon Musk in the sun-scorched suburbs of Pretoria and asks you to sit with the weight of what that childhood actually felt like from the inside, you understand that this is not another hagiography dressed up as biography. This is something far more honest, far more unsettling, and in many ways far more generous to its subject than any flattering portrait could ever be, because Winthrop understands that the only way to do justice to a man of this scale is to refuse to simplify him.
The book opens in Phase One, which Winthrop calls "The Foundations of a Man-Child," and that title alone tells you everything about the author's sensibility. He is not mocking Musk with that label, nor is he absolving him. He is naming something precise: the particular condition of a person whose intellectual architecture is towering and whose emotional architecture is still, in crucial ways, the architecture of a wounded boy. Winthrop builds the early chapters with the patience and structural care of someone who has genuinely studied psychology alongside history, and the result is that by the time you finish reading about Errol Musk, about the volatility of the household, about the way that living with a man of brilliant and unpredictable cruelty teaches a child to seek total control over every environment he subsequently inhabits, you feel you have not just learned something biographical. You feel you have been handed a key that unlocks every decision Musk has made since.
The chapter about the schoolyard assault at Bryanston High School is the one that will stay with me the longest. Winthrop describes the incident with an unflinching attention to physical detail — the concrete stairs, the cascade of the fall, the continuation of the beating after Musk hit the bottom, the surgery to repair his nose, the breathing problems that would follow him for years — but what makes the writing exceptional is that Winthrop never lets the physical drama overwhelm the psychological argument he is making. He traces a direct and utterly convincing line from that afternoon in Johannesburg to the "demon mode" that Musk's employees have described across decades and companies, to the wartime posture that defines his leadership, to the purchase of Twitter and the dismantling of its moderation systems. The boy who learned at the bottom of a staircase that authority is a fiction and that the only protection is power grew into the man who bought the global town square to ensure he would never again be the one pushed from the top. Winthrop makes you see this not as a justification for anything, but as an explanation for everything, and the distinction between those two things is where the moral intelligence of this book lives.
What I find remarkable about Fave's approach throughout is that he refuses to choose between admiration and critique. He holds both simultaneously, the way you have to hold them when the subject is genuinely complex. When he describes the science fiction of Musk's childhood — the deep immersion in Douglas Adams and Isaac Asimov — he is not being cute or reductive. He is doing serious intellectual history. The argument that The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy gave Musk his tolerance for cosmic absurdity and his permission to fail spectacularly, while Foundation gave him the cold mathematical urgency to act as though civilization's survival depends on his personal output, is one of the most original and persuasive arguments in the entire book. You can feel the author's genuine excitement in these pages, the joy of someone who has made a connection that feels both surprising and inevitable, and that excitement is contagious. By the time Winthrop describes the Falcon Heavy launch with the Tesla Roadster and the "Don't Panic" sign on the dashboard and David Bowie playing in the void, you understand it not just as a publicity stunt but as the culmination of a conversation that a lonely boy in Pretoria began with a paperback book, a conversation he has been conducting with the universe ever since.
The Penn years chapters have a different energy — tighter, more analytical, almost architectural in their precision. Fave is interested in how the dual degree in Physics and Economics forged a specific cognitive tool, one that allowed Musk to enter industries he had no formal training in and immediately identify the gap between what was physically possible and what the industry had convinced itself was achievable. The "First Principles" section is the most intellectually dense part of the book, and it rewards the reader who slows down, because Winthrop is not just describing a thinking technique. He is describing a personality trait, a way of encountering the world that is simultaneously liberating and socially devastating. The person who only trusts what can be derived from fundamental physical law is a person who will always be in conflict with the social fabric of any institution he joins, because institutions run on shared agreements about "how things are done," and to someone who can prove from the math that how things are done is wildly suboptimal, those agreements feel like a collective delusion.
The Zip2 chapters are where the book shifts from psychology to drama, and Fave has a real novelist's gift for scene-building. The image of Musk sleeping on the futon in the Sherman Avenue office, walking to the YMCA to shower, returning to code through the night while the rest of Silicon Valley slept — this is rendered with a vividness that makes you feel the loneliness and the obsession simultaneously. And then the conflict with the professional engineers, the "spaghetti code" war, the board bringing in an adult CEO, Musk sneaking back into the server rooms at night to undo the "elegant" architecture that the new hires had imposed on his work — all of this is narrated with a precise eye for what it reveals about his character. He did not just want to succeed. He wanted to be the one who succeeded, and the distinction mattered more to him than the outcome. The lesson he took from Zip2 was not about code or product or market fit. It was about control. He decided he would never again allow a board to install someone above him, and every major move he has made since can be read as the enforcement of that decision.
Phase Two, which Fave calls "The Impossible Vertical," covers the years from 2000 to 2020, and this is where the book achieves a kind of propulsive momentum that is genuinely difficult to put down. The Moscow trip to buy refurbished Russian ICBMs is rendered as dark comedy — the image of Musk being physically spat upon by Russian generals, the contempt of the old aerospace establishment for this strange South African with a credit card and a Mars dream, the long flight home during which he did the math on a spreadsheet and decided that if the raw materials cost this little, he would simply build the rockets himself — this sequence captures something essential about his character that no amount of business school analysis could. He does not respond to humiliation with retreat. He responds with engineering.
The production hell chapters covering the Model 3 ramp-up are some of the most gripping in the book. Winthrop does not romanticize this period, but he does not condescend to it either. The tent in the Fremont parking lot, the couch on the factory floor, the weeks of missed sleep and the personal and professional cost of demanding the impossible from people who had already given everything — Winthrop treats all of this as simultaneously heroic and troubling, as evidence of a man who genuinely cannot distinguish between his mission and his identity, and who has therefore constructed a workplace culture where that distinction is unavailable to anyone who works for him either.
Phase Three, covering the Twitter acquisition and the political pivot, is where the book becomes genuinely urgent in a way that goes beyond biography. Winthrop is writing about a man who has become a force in international politics, whose control over satellite internet infrastructure makes him a player in active military conflicts, whose AI company is building tools that the Pentagon is using for real-time geopolitical simulation. The "Digital Sovereign" framing that Winthrop uses throughout this section is not hyperbole. It is a sober reckoning with the fact that the categories we have for understanding power — nation-state, corporation, media empire — are no longer adequate for describing what Musk has become by 2026. He is something new, and Winthrop is honest about the fact that we do not yet have the language, let alone the laws, to govern it.
The final phase, covering Neuralink and the neural-AI convergence, is where Winthrop's writing takes on an almost elegiac quality. He is describing something that is simultaneously the logical conclusion of everything that came before — the science fiction dreams, the First Principles engineering, the civilizational urgency borrowed from Asimov — and something genuinely unprecedented in human history. The question of whether a private corporation should have a direct link to human neural data, the question of what "thought privacy" means in a world where that data can be harvested and analyzed, the question of whether the "symbiosis" Musk advocates is liberation or the deepest form of control imaginable — Winthrop raises all of these without pretending to resolve them, which is the only intellectually honest position available.
What makes Grokstar essential reading, finally, is not any single argument or revelation. It is the sustained quality of attention that Winthrop brings to his subject — the refusal to reduce Musk to either a hero or a villain, the insistence on holding the trauma and the triumph together, the recognition that the most world-altering figures in history are almost never the ones whose internal weather is calm and whose motivations are simple. Winthrop ends the book at Starbase, looking at the stacked Starship fleet preparing for the Mars window, and the final pages have the quality of a held breath. He asks whether Musk's legacy will be the man who saved humanity's light or the man who accidentally extinguished it in the pursuit of his own ego, and he does not answer. He leaves you standing in the Texas sun with the question, which is exactly where a book about a man this complicated should leave you: uncertain, unsettled, and unable to look away from the sky.