Saturday, February 29, 2020

BOOK BLAST & REVIEW - 2037: The End of Tolerance by Luke Mauerman

BOOK BLAST


Book Title: 2037: The End of Tolerance
Author: Luke Mauerman
Publisher: Beekman Place Editions
Cover Artist: Mark Anderson
Release Date: May 21, 2019
Genre/s: Gay, Science Fiction, Dystopian
Trope/s: When Gay Becomes Illegal
Themes: Culture War, Future Dystopia, Gay Love, Technology
Heat Rating: 2 flames 
Length: 235 pages

It is a standalone book.



Buy Links - Available on Kindle Unlimited






When Gay Becomes Illegal

Blurb 


A novel about life in a United States gone mad, where the government falls apart, California secedes from the union, and Liberals and Conservatives finally battle each other in the streets. It's the Culture War, and it's coming. Find out what to do when men and women start to get caged up just for being gay; when climate disasters unfold and wreck the economy; when the world falls apart once and for all. It's 'Atlas Shrugged,' but in reverse.

Stephe Stafford, embroiled in this conflict, hopes to preserve his sanity—and even finds love along the way. In 2037 we watch Stephe, orphaned in the Great San Francisco Earthquake of 2022, grow up and even blossom into his own.

New technologies and old politics weave together to form amazing possibilities and hopes—and certain dangers, too. Read about the fate of America as we move into a chilling new future. Find out what can we do when the world goes awry.

Review 


My Rating - 4 Stars!

2037: The End of Tolerance is one of those rare books that I am constantly talking about since reading it. This Luke Mauerman novel is as riveting as it is terrifying. 

It all starts with an earthquake in 2022, in which Steph loses his parents. From there's it's just downhill for the boy and the country. This is a coming of age story, as Steph grows up and explores his sexuality. The reader is there to witness Steph's coming out and his first times, all admist the rise in homophobia and racism.  

It definitely hits on the political climate we are currently in, as the racial and homophobic issues get worse each year. Thus creating the climate that is set in this awful author created world in 2037. Basically, read this if you're interested in a story of what could happen if the hatred in politics continue. If that's not your thing, skip this one. Me? I love it. 

The author also explores what may happen with technology and climate change, which is interesting for sure. 

The writing is well done, sharp and with a good flow. All sex is fade to black. I wish I could say this is a insanely author created world, but damn, if it doesn't scare you, I don't know what will. It's unfortunately a strong indicator of what can happen to us.

2037: The End of Tolerance is not a romance. This Luke Mauerman is a novel of what could unfortunately happen if homophobia and racism continues to flourish. 



Excerpt

Republican President Mitch Kellum, elected in 2028, urged calm, but the damage was done. Calls for the election to be overturned sprang from all parts of the country. Kellum denied any wrongdoing. It was the Russians and the Chinese, he claimed, determined to destabilize the U.S.

Democrats had lost all remaining political power and the conservative U.S. Supreme Court upheld the election in predictable fashion, six to three.

It was like a bomb had gone off. Protests turned to riots. Far-right fundamentalists took to the streets in support of the election, and faced off with teeming hordes of furious liberals. A nation that had been savagely divided, blue against red, liberal against conservative for the past thirteen years, would eventually fall into violence. It finally happened in Philadelphia on November 9, 2030. Rioting liberals clashed with Freedom Fighters, neo-Nazis, and Proud Boys on Market Street at the beautiful Philadelphia City Hall building. Fisticuffs, brawls, burning cars. Shots rang out. The police, caught in the middle, fell apart; each officer defected to his or her side of the political divide and joined the fight.

The Culture War had begun.

Battlements were hastily built in the streets of Washington, DC, New York, Chicago, Seattle, Los Angeles, Miami, Atlanta, and Minneapolis. It was bedlam. The streets became littered with bodies as street fights broke out: Red versus Blue, Conservative versus Liberal.

People fled the cities only to find skirmishes in the suburbs. Ikea parking lots were battle zones. A Home Depot in Enid, Oklahoma, was burnt to the ground. Fires started everywhere.

The country spasmed in violence, hand to hand, block by block. After thirteen years of political loggerheads, the center could no longer hold. Any attempt at civil discourse fell on deaf ears. It was us against them, everywhere.

A typical confrontation would be as follows: Unarmed Liberals vastly outnumbered armed Freedom Fighters. They'd go toe-to-toe in the streets, yelling and waving signs in confrontation. Fist fights would break out. But then someone would get mad, grab their gun, and start shooting. Others would join in and the unarmed protesters would flee back behind barricades of cars, buses, dumpsters and buildings, leaving the dead and wounded in the street. It was like a form of trench warfare—and this was played out in cities and towns across the country. Attack and retreat. Attack and retreat. And anger—people were incredibly angry. They fought tooth and nail, neighbor against neighbor, family member against family member.

In San Francisco the tens of thousands of liberals lining Market Street day after day eventually found themselves being bludgeoned by Freedom Fighters. Skirmish lines fell into place along the main street and shots were fired. Freedom Fighters were hopelessly outnumbered though and, despite having guns, were quickly overpowered by the throngs of San Franciscans. They fled.

Stephe was there with Nicole. They'd come up from Harrison Street to take part in the demonstration that day. Nicole wound up hitting a neo-Nazi with her shoe, bloodying his face while Stephe—feeling nothing but cold rage—just took his rifle and hit him with it.

The National Guard had to be mobilized to quell the riots, and still it wasn't enough. The U.S. Army and the Marines were added and took to the streets with water cannons and tear gas.

Finally the main fights in the bigger cities were quelled by force. After six bloody days the spasm ended. Thousands were dead. Many more thousands were arrested by the military and taken to separate camps, red and blue, for disturbing the peace and inciting violence.

Thus began a new Cold War as Americans could no longer speak to one another.







About the Author 

Luke Mauerman is a former columnist for Bear and 100% Beef Magazines, and is well into his trilogy of books on time travel. He majored in English from the University of Washington in Seattle and currently resides in Palm Springs.


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