The House That Won't Clear is a meditation on presence, language, and the strange ways people learn to live with what cannot be removed.
A letter addressed to "the mouth" should have gone nowhere. Instead, it opens the door.
Soon a rough, uninvited figure is standing inside the narrator's house ? offering advice that is calm, confident, and impossible to refuse. He does not threaten. He does not shout. He simply remains.
As the house adjusts to this new presence, language begins to change. Numbers misbehave. Dogs hesitate at their bowls. Conversations collapse into repetition. "My God," "sure, sure," and "it's cool" become the vocabulary of survival.
The intruder does not need permission. Eventually, he does not even need to appear.
Nothing is resolved. Everything continues.
Autorentext
Otto Handley was born in Spitzbergen in 1979 and later studied sociology at the University of Manchester, where his fascination with the hidden structures of everyday life first took root. Now living in Basingstoke with his wife, Amalietta, and their six children, Handley divides his time between writing, exploring caves, tending to an unruly collection of orchids, and coaxing baroque melodies from his lute. His work blends domestic observation with philosophical curiosity, reflecting a life shaped equally by the depths of speleology and the delicate discipline of horticulture.