What if everything you believed was planted?
What if the choices you defend most confidently were planted long before you ever made them?
Trojan explores the hidden mechanics of influence, perception, power, and control. Moving through ideas of social conditioning, language, attention, silence, wealth, and psychological strategy, it reveals how invisible forces shape the way people think, behave, and desire.
This is not a book meant to be rushed through once and forgotten. It is a book designed to be returned to, decoded, and seen differently each time.
Some ideas reveal themselves only after time.
Trojan is a forbidden manuscript disguised as a strategy book.
Autorentext
James Lee writes about influence, perception, and the hidden structures that shape human behavior. His work explores how ideas spread, how power operates beneath the surface, and how individuals can recognize the forces that quietly shape their choices.
Trojan is his first exploration into the unseen architecture of influence.