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America, 2209. In a cramped, damp office in the New Capital, an Editor sifts through the Imperial Archives—the salvaged remnants of a civilization that tore itself apart and spent generations finding its way back. From those ruins he assembled a mosaic of voices who lived through what a nation became when it stopped believing it owed anything to its children. Among them: A child of eight who wrote her diary on an Oklahoma farm while the world outside slowly stopped making sense. A young man in New York who could quote the founders fluently and treat a girl from Tennessee trying to sell her memoir as political practice. A woman in a besieged city who wrote in her journal each night because it was the only thing keeping her upright. A man who stood on a wooden crate under a streetlamp and said the thing that got him killed, and a soldier who knelt in the ash of a ruined cathedral on his twentieth birthday. Running beneath them all, the Editor's prime question: What is the cost of a people's failure to be more? And who pays—in real kitchens, real churchyards, real gutters—when they decide the cost is someone else's to bear? These are not chapters. These are what survived: debate transcripts, surveillance recordings, diaries, journals, poems, eulogies, a presidential address, a war memorial—131 years, three volumes, compiled into one corpus by a man who believed these fragments were worth recovering from the grave.
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