Solo Agers: Book 1 - Kakistocracy is a gripping dystopian fiction book that blends the chilling oppression of The Handmaid's Tale with the resilience of Parable of the Sower, set in a prison where the elderly are criminalized for being childless and a burden to society.
Within the concrete walls of the San Joaquin Transitional Facility, Dr. Stephanie Reese—persecuted and incarcerated not just for her age but as a Solo Ager, an elder without children—transforms her quiet defiance into a seismic challenge against a draconian regime that's taken over America.
Driven by her determination to protect her Parkinson’s-afflicted husband, Ben, and with time running out for him, Stephanie allies with fierce inmates and uses her medical expertise to challenge a system that criminalizes her very existence – becoming a force the government never anticipated.
In just a handful of pages, Myron Ward delivers the kind of unsettling resonance you’d expect only from weighty classics like 1984 or The Handmaid’s Tale. But where those giants sprawl across chapters, this Kindle short read hits fast and deep, compressing its dystopian vision into a potent surge of moral defiance.
The result? A concentrated dose of narrative impact that defies its length, lingering in your mind as if you’d read an entire epic.
Solo Agers: Book 1 - Kakistocracy is a gripping dystopian fiction book that blends the chilling oppression of The Handmaid's Tale with the resilience of Parable of the Sower, set in a prison where the elderly are criminalized for being childless and a burden to society.
Within the concrete walls of the San Joaquin Transitional Facility, Dr. Stephanie Reese—persecuted and incarcerated not just for her age but as a Solo Ager, an elder without children—transforms her quiet defiance into a seismic challenge against a draconian regime that's taken over America.
Driven by her determination to protect her Parkinson’s-afflicted husband, Ben, and with time running out for him, Stephanie allies with fierce inmates and uses her medical expertise to challenge a system that criminalizes her very existence – becoming a force the government never anticipated.
In just a handful of pages, Myron Ward delivers the kind of unsettling resonance you’d expect only from weighty classics like 1984 or The Handmaid’s Tale. But where those giants sprawl across chapters, this Kindle short read hits fast and deep, compressing its dystopian vision into a potent surge of moral defiance.
The result? A concentrated dose of narrative impact that defies its length, lingering in your mind as if you’d read an entire epic.