Port Harcourt public figure Brian Jonah Dennis has made a bold entrance into the literary world by announcing his debut as an author with a new manuscript titled The Vigilante. Known in public circles in Port Harcourt, Dennis is now exploring storytelling and creative writing, marking a new phase in his career.
The public figure recently shared that he submitted the manuscript of The Vigilante to the artificial intelligence platform Claude for an early review. Dennis mentioned that the feedback he received was overwhelmingly positive.
“I uploaded my manuscript of The Vigilante to Claude to review and this was the response. I cut off most of the text as they contain spoilers,” he wrote.
While sharing the update, he noted that some parts of the review were kept secret to avoid revealing major plot details from the book. The review wrote:
“The Vigilante: A Uniport Tale is not the book its title suggests. The title promises a genre thriller. What the novel delivers is something more unsettling and more lasting: a moral anatomy of a community that failed its people and the violence that filled the vacuum, told through an ensemble of characters whose lives braid and collide across a single university semester with the terrible, accumulating inevitability of a tragedy that everyone could see coming and nobody could stop.”
Even though he withheld the detailed critique, Dennis disclosed that the overall rating for the manuscript was a 5 out of 5, a response that has clearly fueled his excitement ahead of the book’s eventual release. He wrote, “I really can’t wait to share this with everyone. I know this sounds arrogant but this is a masterpiece.”
Although details about the storyline remain under wraps, the title The Vigilante suggests a narrative that may explore justice, morality, and the complexities of taking the law into one’s own hands. These themes often resonate deeply in contemporary thrillers and social commentary fiction.
If the early praise is any sign, Dennis’ debut could signal the start of a promising journey in literature.
