Welcome to part one of four of the
official author’s blog of the dystopic novel, Tombstone
Philosophy. The reason for these blogs is so that you, the reader,
can get the opportunity to peek inside the author’s mind with the
thought process and chronicling of this novel’s creation.
For those of you not familiar with Tombstone Philosophy, it is an eBook written by Bryan Miller about a world where the United States is being governed by a twisted incarnation of the Catholic Church, and of a group of freedom fighters whose goal is the return of separation of church and state by any means necessary.
The reason why I wrote a book on such a sensitive subject, is because I wanted to explore the dangers of church and state with a worst-case dystopic scenario, similar to George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four with his exploring the dangers of communism and the scenario of an utter takeover in Britain’s fictional Oceania. There aren’t too many medium that dare play on the topic of religion, but to me, the writer, a story’s a story, no matter what its content consists of.
Tombstone Philosophy is a book that depicts the corruption of even the most reputable of religion organizations, and of its corruption (and the reader’s view of that corruption) going as far as I dare through the depths of my imagination. It’s a book where the reader can have different interpretations on its plot elements, whether you’re in favor of the anarchist Crusaders and their mission to free the country from the Church’s grip on it, or the Catholic Church, whose actions saved the country from itself and ushered it into a new era of order created by its new leader, Pope Alexander IX.
While there are works of fiction that describe the lower echelons of the Catholic Church of their wickedness, with Tombstone Philosophy I wanted to go straight for the source and make the Holy Father himself be the main antagonist of our story.
Keep in mind that I, the author of Tombstone Philosophy, have an absolute respect towards all religions that respect life and that of others. In Tombstone Philosophy, it can be viewed that the Catholic Church is a tool, and that all its resources and influence have been taken over by a man with a twisted belief on what is just, and how he can save the whole sinful world from damnation.
Tombstone Philosophy is not an anti-Catholic novel, nor is its intent to make offense of Catholic doctrine. Tombstone Philosophy is a work of fiction, a product of my imagination.
All I ask, reader, is that you keep an
open mind.
Cover for PDF Three-Chapter Preview |