
Shipping Estimate
USA
- USA
- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 8 - Jul 13
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
Abernathy: the tribulations of faithSkylar R. Leisey is an American writer and engineer whose work examines identity, suffering, transformation, and the psychology of self perception. Drawing from personal experience and philosophical inquiry, he writes with direct intensity on fear, love, generational cycles, and the tension between who we are and who we attempt to become. His work operates within the tradition of Western philosophical introspection, engaging questions of moral
Skylar R. Leisey is an American writer and engineer whose work examines identity, suffering, transformation, and the psychology of self-perception. Drawing from personal experience and philosophical inquiry, he writes with direct intensity on fear, love, generational cycles, and the tension between who we are and who we attempt to become. His work operates within the tradition of Western philosophical introspection, engaging questions of moral duality, internal contradiction, and the enduring presence of both good and evil within the individual.
Leisey wrote Abernathy at the age of seventeen, later publishing the work at twenty and republishing it at twenty-three. Emerging from a later stage of development than his debut, the work reflects a shift in perspective-less concerned with identifying internal struggle and more focused on confronting it directly. Where earlier writing captures awareness, Abernathy advances into examination, resistance, and consequence.
As the second volume in a five-part philosophical poetry series, Abernathy deepens the foundation established in Baywater. It explores the mechanisms that govern internal conflict: control and the illusion of control, attachment and its distortions, self-sabotage, and the recursive patterns that define human behavior across time. The work does not attempt to resolve these tensions; rather, it isolates them, presenting the mind as an active and often opposing force-one that shapes perception, distorts meaning, and challenges the individual's capacity for clarity and direction.
Central to Abernathy is the idea that good and evil are not external absolutes but internal conditions that coexist and compete within the same framework of thought. The work examines how these forces manifest in decision-making, relationships, and self-judgment, emphasizing ambiguity over certainty. In doing so, it aligns with a broader philosophical tradition that views identity not as fixed, but as continuously constructed through conflict, reflection, and response.
The tone of Abernathy is more deliberate and sharpened than its predecessor, reflecting a progression from observation to confrontation. It carries a heightened awareness of consequence-how internal patterns, if left unexamined, repeat across time and across generations. This introduces a structural emphasis on cycles: inherited behaviors, learned responses, and the difficulty of breaking from them. The work positions transformation not as a singular event, but as an ongoing process that requires recognition, resistance, and sustained effort.
Abernathy is the second installment in a five-part poetic structure that parallels Leisey's larger narrative project, A Story of Cardinals. While the remaining poetry volumes and the five-part saga are forthcoming, both bodies of work are intentionally aligned. The poetry serves as a distilled internal record-philosophical, psychological, and abstract-while the saga expands these same themes outward into narrative form, exploring identity, control, suffering, and meaning across a broader external framework.
Together, these parallel structures form a unified body of work. The poetry examines the internal architecture of thought and emotion, while the narrative explores how those internal forces manifest in action, consequence, and environment. Within this framework, Abernathy functions as a transitional piece-bridging awareness and confrontation, and establishing the deeper philosophical questions that continue to unfold across both series.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
- Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy