Mehmet Çalışkan is a writer who sees writing not as a comfort zone, but as a field of mental confrontation. His interests are not limited to human psychology; money, power, consciousness, systems, and the cosmos are different facets of the same intellectual trajectory.
His works reject genre expectations. Money Doesn’t Change, But You Can approaches financial freedom not through motivational promises, but through discipline, awareness, and emotional control. Money does not change; what must change is the mental structure of the individual.
Children of Jotunheim is a philosophical science fiction work that deliberately excludes human-centered narratives, placing ideas rather than events at its core. It focuses not on heroes, but on systems; not on emotions, but on the relationships between power and consciousness. Its aim is not to entertain the reader, but to unsettle them.
The Big Crunch presents a metaphysical model that treats the universe not as a static structure, but as a layered and vibrational process. Time, matter, artificial intelligence, and consciousness are reconsidered within this framework. This is not a presentation of a theory, but an ontological challenge.
The Mind’s Operating System is the necessary inward counterpart to this outward journey. It lays bare the mind’s biases, personality structures, and behavioral patterns. It offers no consolation; it offers explanation.
Çalışkan’s books do not offer escape—they demand confrontation.