Touching Everything, Holding Nothing Audiobook By David Boles cover art

Touching Everything, Holding Nothing

Twelve Stories of the Extraordinary and the Alone

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Touching Everything, Holding Nothing

By: David Boles
Narrated by: Ric Chetter
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The title comes from "The Atomic Man," the seventh story in the collection, where a teenager named Calvin Reece understands what he has become. He has become light: the loneliest thing in the universe, touching everything, holding nothing. But the phrase describes all twelve protagonists. Each one reaches the world in some remarkable way and finds that the reach itself prevents the grasp. They affect everything around them and possess nothing of what they most need: ordinary human closeness, the unremarkable warmth of being known without being studied, feared, worshipped, or fled from.

These stories were written over the course of twenty-five years. Some began as voices that arrived uninvited and would not stop talking until they were written down. Others grew from clinical questions, historical curiosities, or scientific facts that seemed to contain a human story nobody had told yet. The neurological literature on aphasia and the preservation of poetic speech patterns. The establishment of the first postal route between New York and Boston in 1673. The physics of gravitational lensing and frame-dragging. The chemistry of medieval textile dyeing. The mechanisms of bureaucratic fraud documented in municipal records. Each story is grounded in research and each one uses that research to illuminate the same paradox: the distance between extraordinary and alone is shorter than we think.

If there is a thesis to this collection, it is this: the bridge between extraordinary and alone is not built by reducing oneself but by finding someone willing to stand in the heat.

©2026 David Boles (P)2026 David Boles
Anthologies & Short Stories Short Stories
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