Map · About

The series, the author, the imprint

About Seer Warns.

An ongoing series of literary psychological dramas set in one fictional American town. Each book stands alone. The cast accumulates. The town stays where it is. The Seer keeps arriving.

The series.

Seer Warns is an ongoing series of literary novels, all set in Harmon, an unincorporated town somewhere in the American Midwest, on a county road that does not appear on most state highway maps. Each book follows one resident through the year a stranger walks up to them and names what is about to happen. The stranger is not the same person twice. The town is.

These are psychological dramas, not horror. The Seer is unsettling only in the way an honest mirror is unsettling; there is no monster, no gore, no supernatural threat. The tension is interior, the slow pressure of a person watching themselves make the choice they were warned against, and the stakes are domestic, a marriage, a career, a parent, a name, the self you cannot survive becoming. What the books are interested in is character under foreknowledge: what a person does when the alibi of not-knowing has been taken away.

The books can be read in any order. Reading them in publication order rewards the patient reader with a slow accretion of cast, David Marsh’s wife Sarah, an ER nurse at St. Clare’s, turns up in the background of three other books before her own; Ruth Calloway’s sister appears in five; the Lamplighter’s booth is occupied by a different protagonist in roughly half the volumes, but no book depends on any other. The series is closer in shape to Cheever’s Shady Hill or Munro’s Jubilee than to a serialized arc. The town is the through-line; the people are the variables.

The first volume, The Good Father, was published in March 2026. The second, The Honest Woman, is in production. Several more are draft-complete; others are in writing. The series has no fixed length, new volumes will appear as they finish, on the press’s own pace, for as long as Harmon has people the Seer has not yet sat down across from.

The author.

The books are written by B. Carter, who lives in the American Midwest about thirty miles from a town that is not Harmon but might as well be. Before the novels, Carter worked for two decades in software, most of it spent building infrastructure for systems that name what is about to happen before it does. The Seer is, in some respects, the figure that work taught the writer to recognize.

Carter is reachable through the imprint at authors@i4seer.com. The author does not maintain personal social media. Correspondence about the books is welcome and answered as time permits. Correspondence about Harmon, specifically, claims to have been there, is read with interest and filed without reply.

The imprint.

Seer Warns is published by Institute for Seer Press, an imprint of i4Seer LLC. The press exists for the series and a small number of adjacent projects. It is not currently open to unsolicited manuscripts.

Books are typeset in EB Garamond, set with display matter in Cinzel, and printed in trade paperback through a short-run press in the American Midwest. ebook editions are produced in EPUB3 and distributed through the standard channels. The covers are designed in-house, and the cover art is by a single illustrator the press has commissioned for the duration of the series.

The map.

The map of Harmon on the front page of this site is the working geography of the series. It is built from the same town document the books are written against, every named street, every named establishment, every named landmark is on the map exactly where it is in the books. The map is, in that sense, the source, the books are downstream of it.

It updates as the series does. Establishments that appear in later books will appear on the map as those books reach publication. The pin density on the map at any given moment is roughly a count of how many books have shipped.

Permissions & press.

For reviews, interviews, classroom adoption, foreign rights, or anything else that requires the press to send mail back: press@i4seer.com. Galleys are sent to recognized critics and educators on request. The press does not currently maintain a publicity list; one will be added when the second book lands.

Brief quotation from the books, in the manner standard to reviewing and criticism, is welcome without further permission. Longer reproduction, including reprint anthologies, requires written permission from the imprint.

A note on the town.

Harmon is not on any map. The county is not a real county. The plant on Cass Street has never existed. St. Clare’s Hospital is a building in the writer’s head. The Lamplighter has been open since 1977 in a town that has been open, in the same way, for somewhat longer than that.

None of which is to say it isn’t real. The reader who recognizes the third booth on the right, or the smell of the diner coffee, or the brown pencil mark on a hardware-store door frame, that reader is in Harmon, has been in Harmon, will be in Harmon again. The town exists where it has always existed, which is in the booth across from you, the moment you sit down.