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Chronarchy War. Who Controls Time Controls the Human Mind (en Inglés)
Tony Yustein (Autor) · Independently published · Tapa Blanda
Quedan más de 100 unidades
21,86 €There are science fiction novels that imagine the future.
And then there are novels that quietly remove the future's ability to threaten us at all.
The Chronarchy War belongs to the second category.
Written by Tony Yustein, this is a rare, disciplined work of speculative fiction that refuses spectacle in favor of something far more unsettling: a world where time itself stops responding to power. No explosions. No saviors. No final victory. Just institutions built to control the future discovering-too late-that the future no longer needs them.
At the center of the novel is Elias Kade, a man whose job is not to change history, but to notice when history begins to resist change. He is not a hero. He is not a rebel. He is a perceptive component inside systems designed for escalation, prediction, and intervention. As those systems lose relevance, Elias does not rise. He drifts. And through that drift, the true cost of control is revealed.
Yustein writes with surgical restraint. Every chapter tightens rather than resolves. Every recognition produces friction instead of clarity. Institutions continue not because they work, but because they cannot imagine stopping. Technologies do not fail-they become irrelevant. Power does not collapse-it persists without traction, quietly injuring itself through routine.
Early readers have described The Chronarchy War as:
"The most accurate fictional depiction of institutional power I've ever read."
"A book that understands how control actually ends."
"Unsettling in a way that stays with you long after the final page."
What makes this novel exceptional is its refusal to comfort. There are no speeches explaining what it all means. No revelations to tidy the ending. The war ends not with surrender, but with withdrawal-of urgency, of leverage, of time's willingness to choose sides at all.
Tony Yustein has written a book for readers who are tired of false climaxes and manufactured hope. For those who sense that the most dangerous futures are not catastrophic, but administratively calm. For anyone who has ever watched systems continue long after their purpose has quietly disappeared.
This is not a story about saving the world.
It is a story about what happens when the world no longer escalates-and power has nothing left to win.
If you are looking for a novel that challenges how you think about time, control, and relevance itself, The Chronarchy War is not just recommended.
It is necessary.
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