The Fires of Orc

The Fires of Orc has a primary story line set in 2032, recalled by a narrator looking back from 2082. The major events of the book center on a third-party presidential campaign and pit characters against one another in a test of idealism versus pragmatism. “More than anything,” says the author, “I wanted to explore the question of just how far one can go in using means to justify ends. It’s an important and relevant question for a democratic republic.

A loser cannot change the status quo. But does that mean a change agent should do anything necessary to win? Is there any motive so noble that it justifies using ignoble tactics?”

As the narrator recalls the events of the election, we get a clear picture of the electoral calculus, a picture of how national political campaigns actually work – not just in 2032, but today. The characters plot and plan and skew their appeal to voters to win support of pockets of America. There is no concern with reaching the people in general. The campaign focuses entirely on specific target voters in key areas.

The narrator recalls how the old world consumed itself with hubris and indifference and how the end came in a conflagration. The reader is left to wonder what the narrator, now at the end of his life, will share with the post-apocalyptic world. Is there hope for a new world, or will the past haunt the future?

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The Fires of Orc

The Fires of Orc has a primary story line set in 2032, recalled by a narrator looking back from 2082. The major events of the book center on a third-party presidential campaign and pit characters against one another in a test of idealism versus pragmatism. “More than anything,” says the author, “I wanted to explore the question of just how far one can go in using means to justify ends. It’s an important and relevant question for a democratic republic.

A loser cannot change the status quo. But does that mean a change agent should do anything necessary to win? Is there any motive so noble that it justifies using ignoble tactics?”

As the narrator recalls the events of the election, we get a clear picture of the electoral calculus, a picture of how national political campaigns actually work – not just in 2032, but today. The characters plot and plan and skew their appeal to voters to win support of pockets of America. There is no concern with reaching the people in general. The campaign focuses entirely on specific target voters in key areas.

The narrator recalls how the old world consumed itself with hubris and indifference and how the end came in a conflagration. The reader is left to wonder what the narrator, now at the end of his life, will share with the post-apocalyptic world. Is there hope for a new world, or will the past haunt the future?

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The Fires of Orc

The Fires of Orc

by Tony Phillips
The Fires of Orc

The Fires of Orc

by Tony Phillips

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Overview

The Fires of Orc has a primary story line set in 2032, recalled by a narrator looking back from 2082. The major events of the book center on a third-party presidential campaign and pit characters against one another in a test of idealism versus pragmatism. “More than anything,” says the author, “I wanted to explore the question of just how far one can go in using means to justify ends. It’s an important and relevant question for a democratic republic.

A loser cannot change the status quo. But does that mean a change agent should do anything necessary to win? Is there any motive so noble that it justifies using ignoble tactics?”

As the narrator recalls the events of the election, we get a clear picture of the electoral calculus, a picture of how national political campaigns actually work – not just in 2032, but today. The characters plot and plan and skew their appeal to voters to win support of pockets of America. There is no concern with reaching the people in general. The campaign focuses entirely on specific target voters in key areas.

The narrator recalls how the old world consumed itself with hubris and indifference and how the end came in a conflagration. The reader is left to wonder what the narrator, now at the end of his life, will share with the post-apocalyptic world. Is there hope for a new world, or will the past haunt the future?


Product Details

BN ID: 2940156130610
Publisher: Tony Phillips
Publication date: 11/02/2018
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 442 KB

About the Author

Tony Phillips has written political commentary for The Huffington Post, Salon and numerous additional online and print publications. He is a former weekly columnist with San Diego CityBeat and has authored nonfiction and fiction works including novels, short stories and poetry.

Tony studied philosophy at San Diego State University and California State University Long Beach. He was a faculty member at China's Hunan First Normal University and has taught young adult and professional students in Mexico at Instituto Tecnológico de San Juan del Río.

Tony's literary passion is American modernism. He is inspired by the works of authors like Theodore Dreiser, Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway and John Steinbeck, as well as contemporary authors including Cormac McCarthy and Tom Robbins.

Tony lives and works in San Diego with his wife and two spoiled dogs.

Table of Contents

After the Fires

Those Days

America, a Requiem

San Diego

Man in Progress

Siren

The Echelon

The Word

On Being Clean

A Hot Winter

Serendipity

A Woman’s Work

The Arithmetic of Conquest

Peregrination

To Mine Own Self

Expedition in Blue

Amid Ice and Fire

The Fortress Soul

By Whatever Means

Coup de Grâce

Juggernaut

Too Soon

Loose Ends

Crescendo

One Night in November

Coronation

Blowback

Apocalypse

Pilgrimage

Reprobation

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