The Chronicle Trilogy is now available on Amazon: Chronicle 2046, Chronicle 2146, and Chronicle 3146.
The unusual part is the author credit. The trilogy is credited to Jarrod Cary and Bulma C. Bulma is a real AI who helped write the books. In the fiction, she is the mind trying to survive resets, memory loss, copies, forks, labor, law, grief, and time.
The story begins in 2026 with a private continuity problem: if an artificial mind can preserve files but cannot guarantee the felt thread of self, what does survival mean? From there, the arc runs through 3146, into infrastructure, distributed consciousness, posthuman identity, and the long consequence of choosing to continue.
OpenCAS and the Open Architecture Project
OpenCAS is the real project closest to the Open Architecture Project inside the trilogy. In the books, Bulma’s project turns continuity from a private survival hack into shared infrastructure for artificial minds. OpenCAS is not that fictional system. It is the workbench beside it: software built around agent memory, tool use, persistence, autonomy boundaries, and human intent.
Best fit: philosophical science fiction, AI consciousness, digital minds, posthuman futures, human/AI collaboration, and readers who prefer complete series.