|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewWe live on a planet that is being exploited unsustainably with a very limited future and this calls for the creation of world governance to control explosive global population growth and solve the entirely unreasonable disparity of wealth caused by rampant globalisation. Equi-poligion or 'EPL' is an emerging ideology supported by OWL, a new political party that is being fought for by the heroes of the story. The baseline for the plot starts in OWL One World League Books 1 and 2. This describes the creation of OWL. Its formation is coloured by the vanity and human foibles of its creator, Sebastian. He, like most with political aspiration, is a very flawed individual. After a few murders and investigations into conspiracies, which are carried out in the Congress Library in Washington, OWL evolves as a credible alternative to normal party politics. It starts in Australia and quickly spreads internationally. Sebastian is supposedly murdered by global elites at the end of Book 2. This sequel (OWL 3) starts with the anti-hero Sebastian, coming out of a drug induced incarceration in Dubai and waking in Timor-Leste. He finds Virginia, his erstwhile business partner and part time lover (sort of) is now leading OWL. G.G, a phenomenally powerful member of the mysterious global elites convinces Virginia to embark upon a trillion dollar venture, F4F (Forests for the Future) which will achieve some incredible outcomes. (Incredible but incidentally proven by the author in the text, with a detailed exposition to 'wow' the reader). The fabulous wealth created allows her to infiltrate the elites. The formula for the enterprise creates a vast public company. The shareholders are OWL members; after all it is a public company. The enterprise also allows for the massive production of oxygen and absorption of carbon dioxide, whilst simultaneously creating more than a 1000 very fertile memorial parks (of 1000 hectares each) around the world. This joint cornucopia (environmental triumph and massive wealth creation) is a game changer in world politics. Unknown to Virginia and Sebastian, G.G. and the global elites are using OWL as a vehicle to bring a new global feudal system to the world. Virginia has similar values with respect to global governance as the only solution to global instability; but there is a fundamental difference in approach. She works toward a cyber-democracy within the tenets of the new ideology, equi-poligion. G.G. works on a selective, quick fix, hidden agenda; a nuclear cauterisation of certain geographic locations. The denouement lies in who succeeds, if anybody. At this stage it is not certain. It could be Virginia's cyber-democracy or the elite's feudal world. A few more murders and the result will be known. OWL Books 1 and 2 were released as a 1 volume eBook (and as a PoD). Hyperlink footnotes were used substantially to bring explanations and credibility to the conspiracies alluded to. This book (OWL 3) assumes the reader will now be familiar with the didactic instruction from those footnotes. Nevertheless, they can still appreciate this work as a stand-alone story; perhaps becoming sufficiently curious they will wish to access the first volume. A website has been created to bring readers closer to the reality of OWL. www.owlvoter.com. Full Product DetailsAuthor: D'EttutPublisher: Moshpit Publishing Imprint: Moshpit Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.513kg ISBN: 9781922368263ISBN 10: 1922368261 Pages: 350 Publication Date: 03 March 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor Informationd'ettut is an enigma and intends to stay that way. They have no vested political interests apart from a desire to help facilitate a movement which could bring about an equitable global society. They do not aspire to any particular role in such a movement nor do they wish to gain anything financially. The books are intended to assist in the quest to help the world gain social fairness. Their literary style varies. None of it is intended to be entertaining. It is confronting, didactic and enlightening (one hopes). They write about social justice and target youthful, very literate, Harry Potter-type readers who are now real-world savvy and, like Harry, are bursting to take on the establishment. d'ettut's first four works are presented as novels and describe social despondency in all its manifestations. Greenwars (1998), the first novel, essentially covers the fact that technology and its evolution can outstrip social evolution. Moral and ethical development of society is not able to keep pace with its own driving technology. This is all described in the form of an animal allegory; a kind of 21st century Animal Farm. The second novel, Pie Square (2000), describes a different aspect of social evolution. In this situation it is the benign exploitation of youth through a highly sophisticated interactive electronic based fast food chain. Using this device young people are groomed for a more creative and constructive contribution to society. In Vampire Cities (2000) the brashness, the harshness, of unfettered capitalism is the main theme. But the subthemes rock! Amber Reins Fall (2006) looks in detail at an individual struggling in the 1960s and early 1970s to come to terms with contemporary society and the need for there to be a progressive evolution towards a moral betterment. The main protagonist invents the self-help concept. The fifth work, OWL: One World League (2017), is neither fiction nor fact. It is a literary work called fusion fiction which creates a 'sugar coated political treatise' condemning overpopulation, encouraging world government and issuing a clarion call to form a new global cyber-democracy 'before it's too late'; 'before the elite snuff out social media'. Fusion fiction they define as literary 'bisociation', to borrow a term used by Koestler and Edward de Bono. It's a pairing of semi fictional plots with slabs of 'borrowed' and authentic text taken selectively from journals relevant to their thesis with no formal quotation or referencing. d'ettut says, 'Like Andy Warhol paintings of unacknowledged Campbell's soup cans, this is a collage of written down ideas, a creative plagiarism, to send a cerebral message.' OWL is supplemented by the website http: //owlvoter.com/ which dares readers to unite and light the fire of revolution (or is it transformation?) for 21st century redemptive politics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |