About the Book:
In the year 2069 the Apocalypse came and went, but Jesus didn’t show up, as some expected.
Instead, a cataclysmic war, natural disasters and pandemics eradicated 90 percent of earth’s population. Now, in 2131, a totalitarian government rules the world from the majestic, opulent capitol of Carthage, Tunisia. Blamed for igniting the war, religion and religious books are banned. Citizens who will not renounce their religion are sent to work camps.
Grant Cochrin, imprisoned in a bleak petroleum camp in what was once North Dakota, leads his family and friends to escape and embark on a long, dangerous quest for a Christian community. Their resource in this journey? A cherished page torn from the now banished Bible—a remnant of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount handed down from Grant’s grandparents.
What if there were an Apocalypse and Jesus didn’t return? What if the survivors found themselves living in a world ruled by a totalitarian government, where religion is forbidden and all religious texts have been destroyed?
In The Remnant, award-winning author Monte Wolverton tells the tale of a band of concentration camp escapees who trek through the lawless American wilderness on a quest for authentic Christianity, only to come face to face with an unthinkable dilemma. The Remnant is a fast-paced story punctuated with dry satire, memorable characters and hard questions about religious institutions.
Learn more and purchase a copy.
About the Author:
Monte Wolverton is an award-winning author and syndicated editorial
cartoonist. He is associate editor of CWR magazine. He is an ordained minister
and holds a MA from Goddard College in Vermont. Along with his wife Kaye, he
makes his home in southwest Washington State.
Margie’s Comments:
The Remnant is a true dystopian
novel, a future world that is generally worse than the one we currently live
in. Yet we can learn much of how to live in our world now by reading dystopian
novels. And I found that to be true in reading The Remnant. If this type of fiction appeals to you, you’ll enjoy The Remnant. Journey with Grant and his
group of escapees from a detention camp in Minot, South Dakota, as they search
of a community of Christians they can identify with. The only thing I didn’t
like about the book is the cliffhanger with which the author ends the book. We
have to wait until 2018 to read the sequel in order to find out what
happens. (Or you can join the Facebook
group page at The Remnant—CWRpress.)