Knowledge Isn’t Always Power
At its core, Knowledge Is Not Always Power examines what happens when awareness becomes a liability instead of a strength. The protagonist’s ability to foresee death places her in an impossible position: to know what is coming, yet be forbidden from intervening. Each vision adds weight to her conscience, forcing her to choose silence over action and distance over connection.
The novel moves fluidly between internal reflection and external conflict, revealing how trauma accumulates quietly over time. Loss is not treated as a single event, but as something that echoes, shapes decisions, and alters how trust is formed. Ordinary settings: workplaces, apartments, streets, become charged with tension because knowledge lurks beneath every interaction.
Malaika Johnson avoids sensationalism, instead focusing on emotional realism. The supernatural element serves as a lens through which themes of grief, responsibility, fear, and restraint are explored. The story asks difficult questions: Is ignorance sometimes mercy? Is survival always the right choice? And what does it mean to live ethically when the truth could destroy you?
This is a novel for readers who appreciate emotional depth, slow-burn tension, and characters shaped as much by what they hide as by what they endure.