What if a single story could spark fame, controversy, and the battle for the truth? Jean Lagacé’s The Manuscript delivers exactly that an intricate web of ambition, betrayal, and the power of words.
At the heart of The Manuscript is Dr. Zielgard, a semi-retired professor whose hobby is weaving fictional worlds. His latest creation, Faith, is a gripping tale about baseball, a magical bat, and the high-stakes 2008 World Series. It’s a story destined to remain a private project until a friend-turned-impostor, Peter Artritis, sees it as his ticket to literary fame.
When Artritis publishes Faith under his own name, the ripple effects are immediate: book sales surge, Hollywood calls, and television shows line up for interviews. But there’s one problem Irma Sanchez, who recognizes her own life and family in the pages of Faith, decides she won’t let this fraud go unchallenged.
Jean Lagacé crafts an addictive reading experience that blurs the lines between creator and character, reality and fiction. Through clever plotting and sharp dialogue, The Manuscript forces us to ask: who truly owns a story, and at what cost does recognition come?
Conclusion / Call-to-Action:
If you’re drawn to novels where suspense meets moral complexity, The Manuscript will keep you turning pages until the very last twist. Grab your copy today and step into a world where truth and fiction are in a dead heat.



