Many people ask me where to begin in order to understand what James Alexander Smith narrated in The Last Paper Book. The answer is here.This is not an ordinary story; think of it instead as a necessary prelude. What Luca Sposito and Heron Robledo have assembled in these pages is the record of a system that began operating silently, changing the way stories are told-and, more importantly, how ideas are planted in our minds.We follow the trajectory of a writer who realizes, too late, that the walls are closing in. There are no massive explosions or cartoonish villains. What exists instead is an invisible structure, a kind of mechanism designed to standardize everything we think and write. It is that unsettling feeling that something is setting the pace, even though you cannot point to where the command is coming from.Here, we reclaim a narrative style that seems to have vanished from bookstore shelves: focused on pure entertainment, yet leaving you with a nagging sense of unease at the end of every chapter. If you feel that contemporary literature all looks the same, this protocol will explain why.