Trusting the Reader

Author Interview
Tasha He Author Interview

In a fractured city built on control and genetic hierarchy, a manufactured soldier and a rebel outsider form a dangerous bond. The title Caenogenesis suggests new or altered origins. What does that idea mean within Yin’s story?

Caenogenesis is a biological term for developmental traits that appear in an organism without precedent in its ancestors—new features that deviate from the inherited pattern. Within Yin’s story, that idea operates on at least two levels.

The literal one is straightforward: Yin is a being without precedent. She’s the first human grown outside a womb, engineered from Aja’s and Ryūnosuke’s genetic material, designed to be something humanity has never produced before. Her very existence is a caenogenetic event.

But the deeper resonance is in what Yin becomes versus what she was made to be. Her Creator designed her as a weapon and then stripped away the traits he considered flaws. Her “ancestral pattern,” so to speak, was a blueprint for a perfect soldier. What emerges instead is something her creators never programmed and couldn’t have predicted: a person who learns what home means, who chooses to sacrifice herself not because she was ordered to, but because she wants to protect someone she cares about. Her arc from “I am not a person” to “you are my home” is itself a kind of caenogenesis. It’s a development of something genuinely new from a template that was never supposed to produce it.

There’s also the species-level layer. Aja’s entire crusade is predicated on the belief that humanity needs a new origin to survive. They believe that the old evolutionary pattern is a dead end in a post-nuclear world. Yin was supposed to be the proof of concept for that new beginning. The irony is that Aja sees her as a tool for species-wide salvation while treating her as an object, while Kraken—who has no grand evolutionary agenda—is the one who actually witnesses and nurtures the new thing Yin is becoming.

Yin begins as detached and controlled, yet becomes deeply human over time. What was the hardest part of writing that shift?

The hardest part was keeping Yin’s voice intact while letting her evolve. She speaks in a very specific register, and that voice is core to who she is. It’s not a mask she’s wearing that gets peeled away to reveal a warmer person underneath. It’s genuinely how she processes and communicates. So the challenge was never “how do I make Yin sound more human?” It was “how do I show humanity growing inside someone who will never express it the way we expect?”

The shift had to be subtle. Yin doesn’t learn to say “I care about you.” She drops the word “Human” from Kraken’s name. She doesn’t tell him she was worried. She finds the medical kit on her own, kneels beside him, and while she’s cleaning bullet wounds out of his arm and leg, she tells him his injuries suggest “carelessness and poor tactical judgment” and that this is “hardly a surprise” because he’s human. She doesn’t laugh at his jokes, but she attempts one of her own and has no idea it landed. Those micro-movements had to carry the entire emotional arc because anything bigger would have betrayed the character.

The real tightrope was the moments where emotion overtakes her against her will. She doesn’t have the vocabulary for what she’s feeling, so she frames it as a problem to solve or a weakness to overcome. Writing those moments meant trusting the reader to recognize the emotion Yin herself can’t name.

If she’d suddenly started speaking in warm, flowing sentences, the whole arc would have collapsed. The point is that she becomes deeply human while still sounding exactly like herself. The growth isn’t in how she talks. It’s in what she chooses to do.

The action scenes are sharp, but the novel keeps returning to the cost of violence. Why was that important to explore?

Because action without consequence is just spectacle. And that’s not the story I wanted to tell.

Kraken is one of the most capable fighters in the book. He can clear a room, hack a prison, and outrun a gang. But every time he pulls the trigger, it costs him something. He kills Markus, the leader of the Metal Vultures, a man who used to be his brother in everything but blood, and the weight of it doesn’t lift from his chest. He whispers “sorry” to a man he just stabbed. He shoots three gangsters, and then he stares at the bodies and feels that cold, sour twist in his gut. I needed the reader to understand that being good at violence and being okay with violence are two very different things.

Yin carries violence differently. She never flinches from a fight and never looks back at the bodies. Her Creator carved out the part of her that would care. So her healing doesn’t come from reckoning with what she’s done. It comes from learning that people have value. The first time Kraken cries out in pain while she’s treating his wounds, something unnamed seizes in her chest, and she doesn’t know what to do with it. She turns away from him, shoves the medical kit shut, because the feeling is so foreign it confuses her. She’s coming to the realization that someone else’s pain matters to her. And once that door opens, it changes everything. It’s what eventually drives her to throw herself between Yang and Kraken, choosing his survival over her own.

The two of them together tell the full story of what violence does. Kraken shows what it costs to feel everything and still have to fight. Yin shows what it costs to have that ability taken from you entirely. Both are consequences.

And then there’s the political cost. Aja weaponizes other people’s violence to justify authoritarian control. Elder Statesman Valenstrom’s murder gets repackaged as a righteous cause. The Farm’s destruction becomes propaganda. Violence in this world doesn’t just hurt the people involved. It reshapes the entire society around it.

But violence in Ignis isn’t limited to bullets and bombs. The wall between Modernist and Retro Ignis is violence. The sweeps that drag homeless people off Market Street before the Liberation Festival so the city looks presentable, that’s violence. Tracking citizens through implanted chips based on where they were born is violence. Kraken walks into Nassar Industries and feels physically sick because the opulence exists specifically at the expense of people like him. The system that starves Retro Ignis while Modernist Ignis glows with LED displays is doing damage every single day.

We live in cities where neighborhoods a few miles apart have life expectancy gaps of decades. Where people are criminalized for being poor and then blamed for the desperation that poverty creates. Where governments respond to protests by expanding police power instead of addressing what people are actually protesting about. Aja’s playbook, using fear to pass authoritarian legislation, framing dissent as terrorism, and manufacturing consent through tragedy, none of that required much imagination to write. I just had to pay attention.

The Metal Vultures are desperate people in survival mode, shaped by a system that abandoned them. Kraken says it himself. The question the book keeps asking isn’t “who is violent?” It’s “what made them that way, and who benefits from keeping it going?”

As the first book in The Gemini Files, what groundwork were you most focused on laying, and where will the next installment take readers?

Caenogenesis is the appetizer before the main course. It’s there to draw readers into the world, get them invested in these characters, and set the table for what comes next. Yin and Kraken’s bond had to feel earned. Everything in the sequel depends on the reader believing that bond is real.

The political groundwork mattered just as much. Aja’s rise had to feel inevitable rather than sudden. Every move they make across Caenogenesis builds toward the epilogue: Valenstrom removed, the R.R.C.A. passed, the Outsiders crushed, and Aja sitting in their dead mentor’s chair holding his wooden dove. The reader needed to watch each piece fall into place so that by the time Aja wins, the horror isn’t a surprise. You saw it coming and couldn’t stop it. Neither could anyone in the book.

As for Metempsychosis, the title means the transmigration of the soul into a new body after death. I’ll leave it to readers to discover how that applies. What I can say is that the world expands far beyond Ignis, the stakes become deeply personal, and everything Yin learned about herself in Caenogenesis gets tested in ways she could never have prepared for. Aja is still moving pieces. And the consequences of that epilogue follow everyone.

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A wall isn’t the only thing dividing the ruined city of Ignis.


In a post-apocalyptic world of gleaming towers and crumbling slums, the high-tech Inner Ring thrives while the Outer Ring fights to survive. Political corruption runs deep, and the government’s grip tightens daily. Rebels like The Outsiders are branded as terrorists—except for those trapped in the shadows, they’re the only hope left.

For Theopold Kraken, a genetically-engineered Recombinant with enhanced abilities, rebellion is more than survival. It’s a cause worth dying for. When Yin, a mysterious woman who may not be entirely human, crashes into his path, everything changes. She’s secretive, strange, and dangerous… and Kraken can’t walk away. As their fragile alliance deepens, he sees in her not just a failed experiment, but someone who longs for freedom—just like him.

Yet trust is lethal. And saving her may cost him everything he’s fought to protect.

Yin doesn’t remember much, but she knows she’s being hunted. Built for a purpose she’s no longer sure of, emotions were never part of the design. Though Kraken’s loyalty and stubborn compassion stir something unexpected in her: curiosity, respect, and the terrifying whisper of humanity. As she strays from what she was made to be, Yin faces a choice: embrace the humanity she was programmed to ignore or run from it forever.

Two broken souls. One chance at freedom. In a world where trust can kill you, choosing each other might be the most dangerous act of all.

Explosive, witty, and raw, Caenogenesis is a genre-bending sci-fi dystopian where identity is rewritten, survival is anything but clean, and what it means to belong when your entire existence was engineered to be alone.

Posted on May 16, 2026, in Interviews and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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