Shadow of the Society (Standalone Novel)
Global Release: Summer 2026
The year is 2120.
The world is on the brink: wars, hunger, corruption – humanity is stumbling under a system that serves only the powerful.
Jake Davis has seen it all: the lies, the greed, the endless failures of politics. But he refuses to remain part of this crumbling game. Together with the founders James and Blizz Farron, he discovers the Society – a movement that no longer demands reforms, but seeks to create a new order. Yet every step forward comes at a cost. Every victory changes Jake – and the question of whether he will become a hero or a tyrant remains unanswered. Will Jake succeed in building a just future? Or will the old system strike back with full force – and destroy him in the process? This story is fiction – but the problems it deals with are real. For decades, humanity has been shaped by the same patterns: complex bureaucracies that could be simpler, political decisions leading to wars not in the people’s interest, but in the service of power.
Jake Davis’ vision is not a manual, but a thought experiment: What could a sustainable, just order look like? And what risks emerge when too much power is concentrated in the hands of a few – even with the best of intentions? This novel does not aim to please. It aims to question. It shows how even well-meaning systems can become prisons if they exist without accountability and open discussion.
The story is a warning – before visions like this become reality… or are misused. I hesitated to publish this book. But in today’s world, where everything seems to be falling apart, I felt it was necessary.
The idea was never simply: “What should be different?”
The question was: “What is truly necessary?”
That’s why the story takes place in the year 2120 – one hundred years from now. By then, will we still be the same society we are today? Or will we have evolved into something greater?
A world without war. Without hunger. A global system where healthcare, housing, or food are no longer privileges, but human rights.
I hope that one day humanity will achieve this. Only then can we speak of a “perfect” society – though even perfection lies in the eye of the beholder.
As Dr. Jake Davis says: “The perfect system is not perfect for everyone.”
This is a dark novel – about the cruelty of mankind and the corruption of old systems.
It is not meant to provoke, but to make people think.
Maybe one day this story will reach the big screen.
Or maybe, it will simply spark the conversation we desperately need.