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Julian Thorne built his life like he built his skyscrapers: rigid, efficient, and impenetrable.
At thirty-two, Julian is a successful architect who views emotions as structural weaknesses and relationships as unnecessary liabilities. He lives by the grid, safe behind walls of glass and steel. But his mother, Eleanor-a brilliant but estranged chemist-sees the cracks in his foundation that no one else does. She sees a man who is dying of loneliness, calcified by his own perfectionism.
She decides to save him. Not with therapy, but with chemistry.
Julian wakes up to a nightmare that defies physics: he is trapped in the body of a toddler. His mind is fully intact, screaming with adult logic and outrage, but his vocal cords can only produce babble, his hands are clumsy paws, and his autonomy has been stripped away by diapers and crib bars.
Trapped in a second childhood he never asked for, Julian must navigate the humiliating architecture of dependency. As he struggles to communicate his identity to a world that only sees a cute, helpless child, he battles a terrifying realization: the harder he fights to remain an adult, the more he suffers. And the more he surrenders to the softness of his new life-the rhythm of the rocking chair, the warmth of the swaddle, the safety of his mother's arms-the more he forgets why he ever wanted to be hard in the first place.
A haunting, psychological exploration of control, vulnerability, and the terrifying comfort of letting go, The Architecture of Soft Things asks the ultimate question: If you could start over, would you build the same man?