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Republic of Forge and Grace
A Parallel-Universe America Novel
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327 pages. Publication date:  January 6, 2026

Republic of Forge and Grace is a bold reimagining of American potential—echoing Kim Stanley Robinson’s systems thinking and the sweeping scope of Callenbach’s Ecotopia. Rich in technical detail, shot through with wit and unexpected sensuality, it’s a love letter to the America that might have been. It is grounded in real-world know-how, for readers who want speculative fiction with brains, a beating heart, and the nerve to ask: what if we made different choices?     

     When Chris Walden stumbles into Boulder, Colorado, in a parallel universe, he’s just looking to shoot some video, cash in, and bail. But what he finds captivates him: a place where folks raise houses together, kids know how to weld, and courtship begins at the Summer Ball. This America never shipped its working hands overseas, never traded its main streets for strip malls. It runs on vacuum-maglev trains and liquid-metal reactors—but it also passes down customizable radios, leaves muddy footprints on the porch, and its dishwashers argue back. Out on the Great Plains, bison and cheetahs run wild again.

     As Chris is drawn into the orbit of an unconventional four-way relationship, his bonds to the place deepen, and he begins to see what his America traded away—and what this one still might lose. In the world he left behind, his entrepreneurial friend sees only an untapped market to exploit.

     Chris came as a tourist. Now, he’s the only thing standing between two worlds.

The novel is available for preorder in full-cast audiobook, eBook, paperback, and hardcover formats from most major online outlets. For your convenience, below are two links.

“Smart, science-driven novel... a reimagined society that’s heartening yet provocative… a thought experiment dressed as a love story wrapped in a speculative adventure.” —BookLife Reviews

 

“keeps the story humming along… A well-developed and compelling parallel-world tale.” —Kirkus Reviews  (Recommended review)

 

“A thoroughly compelling, completely absorbing portrait of possibility and realization which operates nicely on both entertainment and philosophical levels.” —Midwest Book Review

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Artist: Gennadi Arkulis

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