Some families pass down recipes. Others pass down murder.Ethan Mercer was seven years old when his father first took him to the killing room. By nineteen, he'd assisted in his first execution. By the age of thirty-two, he had personally killed seventeen people, including rapists, child abusers, and predators whom the justice system had failed to stop.His parents called it "correction work." A sacred family tradition spanning three generations. A moral imperative to remove threats that courts and police couldn't touch. Ethan was raised to believe that violence, when wielded against the guilty, wasn't murder; it was justice.Until the day he started to question everything.Now, as the FBI closes in and his parents plan their next kill, Ethan faces an impossible choice: continue the family legacy or betray the only people who've ever loved him. Testify and destroy three generations of "righteous" work. Stay silent and become complicit in future deaths.But the real horror isn't what his family has done. It's how easily Ethan believed it was right.The Family Man Experiment is a chilling psychological thriller that explores the thin line between justice and murder, the devastating power of indoctrination, and the terrifying question: What if the monster under your bed is the person who tucked you in at night?Perfect for fans of: Dark psychological thrillers with morally complex protagonistsStories exploring cult dynamics and family extremismCrime fiction that questions the nature of justiceCharacter-driven narratives about identity and transformationContent Warning: This novel contains graphic depictions of violence, discussions of sexual assault and child abuse (not depicted), complex moral themes, and exploration of vigilante justice. Reader discretion advised."A masterful exploration of how good people convince themselves that terrible acts serve higher purposes. Unflinching, disturbing, and impossible to put down.""Not a comfortable read, but an important one. Prasanth N.M. forces readers to examine their own certainties about justice, morality, and the nature of evil.""The most psychologically complex thriller I've read in years. Ethan Mercer is simultaneously victim and monster, and that duality makes this story devastatingly effective."