Book Two · Available Now

Sisyphus.gov

A Workplace Comedy About Impossible Tasks

A satirical novel about what it actually feels like to push the boulder inside a modern organization — and what a leader does when they realize the hill was designed that way.

Satirical fiction Workplace comedy Organizational diagnosis

The opening

Meet Evan Calder.

Evan Calder arrived at the agency believing public service meant something, that modernization was possible, and that a talented systems engineer could walk into a federal agency and, through sheer competence and goodwill, make things better.

He was twenty-nine then, and stupid.

Now he is thirty-three, and tired.

Sisyphus.gov is a sharp, funny, uncomfortably accurate novel about the mythology of the modern workplace — the contradictory directives from on high, the acronym hydras, the watermelon metrics that look green on the outside and bleed red on the inside, and the quiet competents who keep the whole machine running without ever being thanked.

It is a workplace comedy with teeth. It is also, underneath the laughter, a serious diagnosis of why good organizations break good people.

Field guide to the world of the novel

You already know
these people.

Readers describe Sisyphus.gov as the rare kind of workplace novel that names things they have felt for years but never had language for.

The boulder

The Acronym Hydra

Every severed initialism grows two more. Every framework is onboarding for the next framework. No one remembers what the first one was for.

The boulder

Watermelon Metrics

Green on the outside. Red on the inside. A dashboard is a story told by the person holding the marker.

The boulder

Contradictory Mandates

Move fast. Be careful. Cut costs. Invest in the future. Be agile. Document everything. Do not ask which of these takes priority.

The hill's keepers

The Secret Latch

The quiet competents. The ones who know where the secret latches are, who fix the machines no one understands, who pass institutional memory across generations without being thanked. The reason the organization still works. The people the novel is ultimately on the side of.

Underneath the laughter

A serious book in comic form.

Sisyphus.gov is the case study to The Lost ARC's framework. Every failure in the novel — every exhausted engineer, every broken promotion, every meeting that produces nothing but a meeting — maps onto a diagnosis the framework names. Autonomy suppressed. Relatedness fractured. Competence unused. Trust collapsed.

Readers who want the clinical version of the diagnosis will find it in The Lost ARC. Readers who want to feel the diagnosis from the inside — to laugh, wince, and recognize themselves — should start here.

Read about The Lost ARC

Get the book

A quick, sharp, uncomfortable read.

Available in paperback and e-book through JRC Productions 323 and major retailers.

Also in the catalog

Two more angles on the same question.