Jason Carroll
Holloway
What the medieval masters encoded in cathedral geometry, grimoire tradition, and acoustic stonework wasn't mysticism. The Masters X Trilogy is the account of proving it.
The Masters X Trilogy
Blake Masters inherits a safety deposit box his grandfather paid for fifty-seven years in advance, timed to arrive at the exact moment Blake would be ready. Inside: seven notebooks. Thirty years of classified aerospace research. A cross-reference to a sealed crypt beneath Prague. The trilogy is the account of what he did with that knowledge — and what it did to him.
Innocence, Desire, and the Architecture of the Fall
A study of John Hawkes across his complete seventeen-novel corpus. Holloway traces how the grape, fermented, animal, transgressive, functions as a counter-symbol to Christian grace throughout Hawkes's fiction, mapping the symbolic architecture of America's most demanding postmodern writer.
Those aren't diagrams, they're technical specifications.
Andrew Chen · Book IThe preparation is not about the frequency. The preparation is about the organism that will receive it.
Nadia Volkov · Book IIThe gate is not arbitrary. The gate is the body. The body requires time. This is not theology. This is physics. This is love.
Blake Masters · Book IIIThe Masters Analysis Chamber
The data underlying the trilogy is real. Cave resonance measurements converging near 111 Hz, documented across four continents. Medieval cathedral proportions encoding acoustic specifications. The Ars Notoria as a structured training protocol. The Chamber isn't an illustration of the novels — it's the research archive that preceded them, built open and accessible.
The Folio Pattern Visualizer lets you stack and rotate 181 historical manuscript pages from the Voynich Manuscript and Ars Notoria, watching sacred geometry overlay and tessellate into interference patterns. This is the pattern Blake saw. The one the books describe. You can see it for yourself.



