A Bold Work of Political Science Fiction About the Next American Century
In the year 2276, as America prepares to celebrate its five-hundredth birthday, a forgotten message from Benjamin Franklin resurfaces from the ruins of Old Washington. Written in 1790 and sealed for the republic's distant future, the letter arrives at a moment when the nation once again stands at a crossroads.
After surviving climate collapse, civil unrest, and the devastating years known as the Troubles, America has rebuilt itself in ways Franklin could never have imagined. Cities have moved inland. Space elevators connect Earth to orbit. Human settlements thrive in the asteroid belt. Yet even in this transformed age, the same questions remain: Who belongs? What does freedom demand? And can democracy survive the weight of history?
2276 is an ambitious and deeply human political sci fi novel that follows the intertwined lives of citizens shaping a fragile new era:
Blending sweeping ideas with emotional storytelling, 2276 combines the scale of space colonization fiction with the heart of literary science fiction. It is a thoughtful exploration of democracy, identity, technology, and the future of citizenship in a rapidly evolving world.
Both intimate and epic in scope, 2276 is a rare kind of dystopian future science fiction novel: one that believes humanity can endure, rebuild, and aspire toward something better. For readers of thoughtful speculative fiction books, visionary hard science fiction, and emotionally resonant futures, this is a journey across centuries toward the unfinished promise of America.