About

About The Author

Greg Morrison is a writer drawn to stories that explore how people navigate grief, change, and the slow erosion of certainty. His debut novel, Elipsions, was born from a collection of personal reflections and dream fragments written during a time of deep transition. Those fragments evolved into a speculative world where memory and morality collide a world both strange and familiar, mirroring the choices we face in our own lives.

Morrison’s approach to storytelling is introspective yet cinematic. He focuses on emotional authenticity first, allowing themes of science, environment, and belief to emerge naturally through the characters’ inner lives. Rather than offering heroes or villains, he writes about ordinary people caught in extraordinary moments people who question what it means to remain human when the world around them no longer makes sense.

Before turning to fiction full time, Greg spent years studying cultural history and philosophy, which shaped his fascination with how societies record and interpret truth. That curiosity informs much of his writing especially his portrayal of the blurred lines between faith, knowledge, and imagination. His work asks quiet but persistent questions: how do we rebuild after loss, and what are we willing to remember or forget in order to move forward?

Author portrait of Greg Morrison

When he isn’t writing, Greg enjoys music, reading classic dystopian literature, and spending time outdoors with family. He keeps a growing archive of notebooks filled with half-finished sentences, story ideas, and sketches a process he describes as “building a map one thought at a time.” For him, writing is less about predicting the future and more about understanding the present one fragile moment at a time.

Elipsions reflects that perspective. Beneath its dystopian surface lies a deeply human story about memory, belonging, and the search for meaning in uncertain times. Morrison’s writing invites readers to slow down, to think, and to see the world not as it is ending, but as it is asking to be reimagined.