Millennium Bug: Some Stories Refuse to Follow Code by Yvonne Knop
- Archaeolibrarian
- 9 hours ago
- 4 min read

Book Details:
Book Title: Millennium Bug
Author and Publisher: Yvonne Knop
Cover Artist: Ursula Roslon
Release Date: September 15, 2025
Tense/POV: third person, past tense, alternating POV
Genres: MM Romance, Fantasy/Sci-Fi
Tropes: Enemies to lovers, forced proximity, found family, chosen one
Themes: forgiveness, fate, grief, love, friendship, hope
Heat Rating: 2 flames
Length: 297 pages, Kindle Edition
It is a standalone book


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David Smith’s life is thrown into chaos when a mysterious book crashes through his window, telling the story of a life he doesn’t remember. A stranger, claiming to be a hidden scribe who weaves reality, demands the book back, warning that keeping it will unravel the world, but returning it will erase David from existence.
As the ancient order of storytellers is threatened to be overthrown by AI, David must reclaim his past and rewrite destiny itself to prevent the erasure of all reality. But if he succeeds, the cost may be too great—unlocking the truth of his fate gives him the power to destroy everything, including the only man he's ever loved.
If the world was never meant to be real, does it deserve to exist?

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Books are only meant to hit you emotionally – but there he was, sprawled on the floor, surrounded by shards of glittering glass. The projectile was a leather-bound book.
David Smith’s typical morning was reliably dull, a ritual of lukewarm coffee in a chipped Doctor Who mug and the comforting scent of gently mouldering board games wafting through his dusty little shop in Barnes. But this was no typical morning.
The book had hurtled out of nowhere, crashing through the shop window and knocking him unconscious before his first sip. The universe, it seemed, had grown impatient waiting for David to pick on up its clues. It was time to literally, and literarily, hit him over the head.
From the outside, David looked like the definition of ordinary: a middle-aged white man with greying curls, an overambitious beard, and a body that bore the telltale marks of a lifelong romance with comfort food. If you had to sum him up in one word, it would be ‘forgettable’. His round, unremarkable face was a passport to anonymity, blending seamlessly into any crowd. Nothing about his life screamed ‘you are the key to one of the universe’s biggest secrets’, but he was in fact a ticking time bomb. Not that he had any idea the fate of the world – and more than the world – was in his hands.
But someone else knew. Someone who had been searching for David tirelessly. They didn’t know his current name or location, which was proving to be an increasingly catastrophic inconvenience. So the universe had decided these characters needed a nudge. David and his pursuer must meet, and they had to meet soon.
The book had hit David with such force that it not only knocked him off his feet but also sent him careening into one of the shop’s rickety shelves. Unbeknownst to him, a loose screw had gradually weakened the integrity of the shelf past the point of no return, and the whole thing was ready to relinquish its hold on the wall as soon as his body touched it. David looked up, his eyes widening just as the shelf broke free. ‘Oh no,’ he whispered as the world around him retreated. He tried roll to the side, to dodge out of the way, but there was no going back. Time, which had seemed so sluggish, suddenly accelerated in a rush of adrenaline. The shelf fell. And with it, David’s life as he knew it.
His instinctual attempt to shield himself was futile; the shelf struck him with a brutal force, burying him beneath a chaotic pile of stationery supplies and board games.
The shop lapsed into eerie silence. The dust danced in the muted sunlight filtering through the window, casting a surreal glow on the glass, the envelopes, the spilled ink, the game pieces, the destruction and disarray. The once orderly space was a jumbled mess.
‘David!’ Hope screamed. His shop assistant sprinted toward him, the soles of her black Martens squeaking slightly on the old wooden floor. Her cropped curly hair, unevenly dyed in different shades of teal like she’d done it herself in a rush, framed her face like a rebellious halo. Around her neck hung a collection of necklaces, each one a unique, mismatched piece – some silver, some leather, one with a tiny hourglass charm that swayed as she knelt beside him. ‘David, wake up!’ Her black skin blushed and her voice trembled with fear as she shook him gently, her necklaces sounding like tiny bells clinking against each other.

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I’m a bi and nonbinary author, secondary-school teacher, and author who believes queer joy deserves the spotlight. I write character-driven queer fiction that makes people laugh and cry — with a twist and a love for the unexpected.
When I’m not writing or teaching English and Politics, I’m rewatching Doctor Who, exploring nature, and cooking comfort food. I find joy in the quiet chaos of creating stories that reflect the beautifully messy lives of queer folks.
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