The Alexandrian Code
Alexander the Great conquered the known world by thirty. You've conquered your couch by forty.
Somewhere between Macedon and Mumbai, between the ancient agora and your air-conditioned office, masculinity lost its edge. Modern men navigate a world that rewards compliance over conquest, that medicates ambition and pathologizes the very fury that built civilizations. You know the script: work, consume, retire, die—all while that thing inside your chest, that ancient thing that remembers spears and impossible horizons, slowly suffocates under the weight of reasonable expectations.
The Alexandrian Code isn't another self-help sermon promising work-life balance. It's a war manual for men who understand that balance is what you seek when you've already been defeated. Through Alexander's blood-soaked journey from prince to god-king, discover the technologies of transformation that modernity desperately wants you to forget: Why your mother's wounds are your secret weapons. How to recognize the one challenge everyone else fears to face. Why burning what you've built might be the only way to build what matters.
This is not a book for men who want to feel better. This is for men who want to become dangerous—to mediocrity, to compromise, to the slow death of unrealized potential.