A Garden for Ignatius is a comic literary novel set in Buffalo New York, written in affectionate homage to the grand absurdities of American satire. Centered on a brilliant, belligerent, and deeply unadaptable protagonist, the novel explores what happens when moral certainty, baroque intellect, and modern life collide.Set in a world impatient with excess-of thought, language, and personality-the story follows a man who refuses to simplify himself for the sake of convenience or social harmony. His convictions are total, his coping mechanisms flawed, and his capacity for outrage boundless. What results is a sustained argument with the present moment, rendered through exuberant prose and carefully constructed disorder.Yet this is not merely a portrait of resistance. Over time, and largely on his own terms, the protagonist begins to discover a footing that does not require surrender. In learning how-and where-to stand, he carves out a place in the world that accommodates both his principles and his peculiarities.Both a celebration and a critique of the difficult personality, A Garden for Ignatius revels in overstatement, eccentricity, and comic defiance. It is a novel for readers who believe great literature should still be unruly-and that even the most obstinate characters may yet find their proper ground. When I wrote A Garden for Ignatius, I wanted to capture the heart and humor of the overlooked-those hilariously odd, stubborn, and quietly lonely people who end up being far more extraordinary than they at first appear.