The Eyes of Caviar is a darkly comic, hallucinatory trip through corporate America's underside, told through the voice of Ted, a burned-out salesman who insists he's actually a writer. While on a business trip, Ted is paired with Lux—his company’s volatile corporate liaison whose charm masks a far more dangerous double life. What begins as drinks after meetings spirals into drug-blurred nights, sexual power games, and an escalating web of criminal entanglements involving sex work, corporate espionage, and Russian organized crime. Ted drifts through hotel bars, private clubs, and luxury suites, observing the world with brutal clarity while participating just enough to implicate himself.This is a uniquely voice-driven story that explores themes of male loneliness, the absurdity of contemporary corporate culture, and the thin line between the mundane and the insane.

Stylistically, the novel blends confessional narration with surreal realism and aggressive dialogue, drawing comparisons to Bret Easton Ellis, Chuck Palahniuk, and Mikhail Bulgakov. It will appeal to readers of transgressive fiction and noir who are drawn to unreliable narrators, moral discomfort, and dark comedy that refuses resolution.