Description
The Moment Before I Notice is a quiet literary work about perception, distance, and how inner experience can shift without changing the outward shape of life.
Written during the author’s late teens, the book stays with moments that feel slightly misaligned, when awareness arrives just after experience. It does not attempt to explain or resolve this state, but remains with it attentively as it unfolds.
The writing moves without narrative urgency, relying instead on observation, repetition, and restraint. Rather than building toward events or conclusions, it allows meaning to gather through subtle changes in attention.
This is a work for readers drawn to introspective fiction and spare prose, where consciousness is explored without instruction, diagnosis, or resolution.
About The Author
Daksh Nailwal began writing in his teenage years as a private way to work through thoughts he could not easily express aloud. He grew up as an only child. His father passed away when he was five, an experience that shaped his independence without defining him.
His interests span science, origami, and philosophy, often blending rather than remaining separate. He is agnostic and guided more by questioning than certainty. His writing reflects a quiet way of observing the world and moving through it.



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