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Douglas Congdon
Author
The Second Convention: America, 2036
Is Thomas Jefferson right? Does the tree of liberty need to be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants? Tom Powell is going to find out. He is the local leader of the Revolutionary Party, and he gives a speech on July 4th that causes a brawl. Now he is being arrested for inciting a riot. His work and marriage are at risk. But he can’t quit the Party. There’s too much at stake. Climate change and the political divisions in America in 2036 have brought the country to the brink of civil war. Militias are on the rise, starvation looms, and revolution is on everyone’s lips. Tom wants radical change in the government, but he wants it without blood in the streets. He takes his team to the Second Constitutional Convention in Columbia, South Carolina. Can he persuade enough delegates to adopt his vision?
Reviews
In this harrowing yet hope-tinged story of a near-future America, Tom Powell is being charged with the crime of inciting a riot due to a speech given on the 4th of July, 2036, wherein he quotes Thomas Jefferson's insistence that "the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.” While Tom's speech was meant to inspire and motivate citizens to push for change in a time of climate disaster and, in his native south, gerrymandered one-party rule, the speech in truth rouses the wrong passions, with aimless, ineffective violence breaking out in the crowd. As a lawyer and the local chairman of the Revolutionary Party who yearns to “fix the flaws in our Constitution, to make it truly represent ‘We the People,” Tom becomes a target of the government and extremists who are out for blood, all as the nation, on the cusp of possible civil war, faces a major inflection point: an upcoming constitutional convention, the first since 1787.

A new recruit in the party calls the constitution “a stagecoach in the era of rockets” and argues, with persuasive power, that “it allows the minority to stifle the will of the majority.” Fearing the “AR-25 substituting for the guillotine,” Congdon’s brisk novel, an engaging blend of social horror and science fiction, calls for peaceful change, as, with help from a few trusted allies, Tom takes his mission to the second Constitutional Convention, where he attempts to win over politicians and lawmakers to restore a united Constitutional vision.

Tom is a relatable, dry-witted protagonist that readers will see as the everyman hero rather than a firebrand. But he must tread lightly, as “everyone’s armed to the teeth,” and factions and domestic terrorists are against them. In an America facing food shortages, and questions of robot liberty, The Second Convention extrapolates from contemporary trends with insight, surprise, and a refusal to accept polarization and gridlock as the nation’s destiny.

Takeaway: Near-future story of pushing for peace and a representative constitution.

Comparable Titles: Elliot Ackerman and Admiral James SStavridis’s 2034, Omar El Akkad’s American War.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

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