The Unreliable Mind is a psychological thriller about a man whose greatest enemy is not the world around him—but his own thoughts.
The story follows a seemingly ordinary person living a routine life. Every day begins the same: waking up, commuting to work, observing strangers, and moving through the predictable rhythm of the city. At first, the only strange thing about him is how deeply he thinks about everything. He analyzes conversations, replays moments in his head, and constantly questions small details others would ignore.
But gradually, small cracks begin to appear in his reality.
He starts experiencing moments that feel strangely familiar, as if they have already happened before. Conversations seem repeated. Certain people appear too often in places where they shouldn’t. Memories blur together, and he sometimes struggles to remember when something actually occurred—or if it happened at all.
At first he convinces himself these are harmless mistakes. Everyone forgets things sometimes.
But the confusion grows worse.
The protagonist begins noticing patterns that don’t make sense. He predicts people’s actions seconds before they happen. Certain events seem to reset themselves. Memories feel incomplete, like missing pieces of a puzzle he can’t see.
Most disturbing of all, he begins to doubt his own past.
Moments he clearly remembers suddenly feel uncertain. People he knows behave like strangers. Places he has visited many times feel unfamiliar. The line between imagination, memory, and reality begins to dissolve.
As the story progresses, his inner thoughts grow louder and more chaotic. The reader experiences the world almost entirely through his mind, making it impossible to know what is truly happening and what might only exist inside his thoughts.
By the final chapters, the protagonist becomes completely lost in his own perception of reality. He no longer knows which memories are real, which moments actually occurred, or whether the world around him has changed—or if his mind has simply stopped working the way it should.
The novel ends with him confronting the terrifying possibility that his thoughts have become more real than reality itself.
And the final question remains unanswered:
Is the world unreliable…
or is his mind?