Munich, Bavaria Mar 11, 2022 (Issuewire.com) - What if the future were past? Given the current world events, that's what many people are likely to secretly wonder. Sima B. Moussavian isn't doing it secretly, but quite publicly: that is, in the sub-title of her new dystopian novel "Tomorrow death died out: What is the future were past?"
THE STORY
The motivating element of "Tomorrow death died out: What is the future were past?" is a message in a bottle from a future in which people can no longer die. In order to save the world, the document demands the annihilation of humanity. In the tradition of iconic genre relatives, such as Huxley's "Brave new world", or Orwell's "1984", the dark and twisted novel tackles dystopian themes like the downside of scientific progress, the loss of individual freedom, or the consequences of overpopulation, all of which are interwoven with contemporary fears and problems. Nothing is too taboo: not even cannibalism and the conspiracy theories that were spread during COVID-19. A book that is just as dark and dramatic as it is descriptive and poetic. One of the central questions: How does the future change when someone knows about it?
THE WRITER
Sima B. Moussavian has been a ghostwriter and novelist since 2010. Her short stories were published in German magazines, such as "Die Novelle - Zeitschrift fuer Experimentielles". In the past, she was involved in German indie film productions and announced literary competitions on current topics such as the pandemic. Ever since she maintains a second residence in Ireland, she has been writing and publishing her novels simultaneously in German and English. Despite its dark and dramatic nature, "Tomorrow death died out: What is the future were past?" reaches the philosophical-poetic dimension, known from the author's previous novels.
Media Contact
SBM Ghostwriting press@simamoussavian.de http://simamoussavian.de