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The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places... In a future of bleakness and roboticism, a totalitarian government enforces upon the people a lifestyle that lulls them into a state of obedience. Your career and social status are predestined and you cannot alter it - this is a reality that walks a fine line between evoking sensations of fear and inducing a sense of futility.
A dystopian reality can sometimes turn out to be as powerful and strong as it can be fragile, collapsing in on itself from one second to the next. As a race, we are fascinated with what comes next, what's over the hill and, inevitably, what happens if we're left all alone. How can things go on? What lessons can we learn?
Broken Worlds takes a peep into an all too possible future. Narration and style change from story to story, but the core of this volume is human emotion. Coloured by their cultures and backgrounds, the storytellers featured in this volume take the idea of a society at extremes and weave a variety of outcomes.
We invite you to read and hope you enjoy this collection.
The Sad Man by
Thomas Brown (competition winner)
From the fifth-floor window of his inner-city flat, a man keeps watch for his friend, the Sad Man.
Pioneer by
Joe Saxon Lidia lives in the waterworks, always hungry, until she receives a message from the supervisors of the upper floors.
The Insects by
Gavin Bryce Thia is a city with millions of electronic eyes. On his retirement day, Roman Huxley has planned a special retirement present for the entire megacity.
Screens by
Alix Owen A story inspired by the advent of Google Glass; when one young man contracts a biomechanical disease, he is forced to see what the world has become while everybody else was social networking.
Machinations by
Shira Hereld A marriage is slowly falling apart as both partners become more and more reliant on mechanical Andros for everything from housework to intimacy.
The Architect by
Gavin Haran A local obituarist tracks the sinister transformation of his town through the introduction of mysterious architectural constructions with unexpected consequences
The Deepening Well by
Sam Hurcom Can a state of mind be considered dystopian - how would the end of history affect the last survivng individual?
3AM Job by
Mark Schultz On a future Earth, where absolute free market capitalism controls the globe, a freelance butcher accepts an early morning job which turns out to be far more profitable than it seems at first glance.
The Farm by
George Vernon A farmer and his family are threatened by their rebellious herd.
Also in the collection... Vision of Paradise by
Clare Banks The Last CanvaS by
Paul Dawson The Leadership Gene by
Francis Beckett Watch by
Miles Gatrell Water Rats by
Terry Holland The Rebel's Daughter by
Virgina Ballesty Meat is Murder by
David Turnbull Equity Lamp by
Adam "Bucho" Rodenburger Dreg Town by
Steph Minns It was the Best of Times by
Konstantine Paradias Carved in Ice by
Doxa J. Zannou Silva's Plague by
Ian Green Urbanova by
Christian Cook Cover art,
Broken Worlds by
Daniel Tyka