What Never Knocked is a novel in verse and prose about a man who prepares a room for an arrival that never comes and slowly realizes he has mistaken postponement for devotion.
Across eight carefully structured chapters, the book traces the evolution of waiting: from rational hope to ritual, from ritual to fatigue, from fatigue to self-recognition. A chair angled toward the door. A key cut and hung on a hook. Evenings arranged around a possible interruption. What begins as dignified patience gradually reveals itself as something more complicated, a life deferred under the promise of "soon."
The work moves between lyrical sonnets, restrained free verse, and precise prose, allowing the language to thin as the illusion thins. The beloved becomes abstract. The promise loses its horizon. The waiting, once romantic, is exposed as avoidance. What never arrives from outside turns out to have always been an internal door left unopened.
This is not a story of heartbreak. It is a study of self-postponement, identity built around expectation, and the quiet realization that beginning does not require permission.
Measured, psychologically exact, and structurally deliberate, What Never Knocked examines the cost of living in anticipation and the clarity that comes when the knock you've been waiting for is finally made from within.