Nightminster sets out into a wild and lawless post-apocalyptic Britain. None of this bothers him. So far as he is concerned, danger = wealth.
There is however one factor he has missed. Revolutionary forces are gathering to sweep aside the outrageous privileges of the ruling caste. Should he join these radicals or fight them? Should he do both?
Nightminster's fight for life and love will drive him to ever greater heights of ambition. He must become too rich to kill—or else perish.
Set in 2072-73, Sovereigns of the Storm is a two-part dystopian series about the coming dark age. It is not suitable for those under 16.
The author has held senior positions in global engineering corporations in a number of countries. He has also consulted to governments at an international level. This has enabled him to observe how power is exercised through various methods.
He is fascinated by how power is cast and how it is accepted. Power must be honest enough to endure, yet dishonest enough to serve arrogance.
Power may become dishonest. That’s when very bad things happen.
We’re told that debt doesn’t matter and renewables will rescue us from climate change. Sorry people, those who live by lies shall die by lies, or to put it another way, education comes to those who wait.
How nasty will this ‘education’ be? And what will the world be like afterwards? These are questions that Malcolm J Wardlaw explores in his dystopian novels.