‘Ashes of the Republic’ Book Review: A Chilling Vision of a Dystopian America

‘Ashes of the Republic’ by James Chesterton. Photo: Amazon

Related post: The Future Is Now: ‘Ashes of the Republic’ by James Chesterton

Book Review: Ashes of the Republic by James Chesterton

Ascent of Dennison Series, Book One

Release date: April 28, 2026.


The Premise: A Republic in Ruins

In the year 2046, the “blueprint” for authoritarian rule is no longer theoretical, it’s fully operational. Ashes of the Republic presents a chilling vision of a United States overtaken by Christian Nationalism. In this near-future dystopia, liberalism is a punishable offense, women’s bodies are governed by data, and AI has replaced human medical professionals.

The Catalyst (2026)

The narrative begins in the Western U.S. with Charity, a young prodigy with degrees from Oxford and Johns Hopkins. As a rising star at Dennison Robotics, Charity works closely with Iwanna Dennison, the President’s daughter and the de facto leader of the American Christian Right.

When a project meeting turns into a heated disagreement, Charity is fired. Realizing she is now a target of the burgeoning regime, she turns to her estranged, wealthy father. He helps her “vanish,” providing her with a new identity and they are only to contact each other once a year, on her birthday.

The Consequence (2046)

Twenty years later, Charity is gone, replaced by Lily Osbourne. Living a quiet, anonymous life in Colorado, Lily is dating Jeff Maslow, a former teacher who lost his job after a copy of Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass was discovered during a routine body search.

Their fragile peace is shattered during a routine airport screening. A TSA agent informs Lily that she is pregnant, an unregistered state that is strictly controlled by the Republic. In this world:

  • All pregnancies are flagged immediately.
  • Fetuses are issued Social Security numbers at conception.
  • The state is notified of “unauthorized” biological activity.

As Lily and Jeff fight for survival, Iwanna Dennison continues her psychotic climb to the highest reaches of power.


Why This Novel Stings

James Chesterton’s writing feels less like speculative fiction and more like an inevitability unfolding in slow motion. The grounded realism makes it a stand out in modern literature.

Key Themes & Highlights:

  • Plausible Terror: The systems of control, AI-driven healthcare, reproductive tracking, and algorithmic governance, are presented as logical extensions of technology we use today.
  • The Reversal of the American Dream: In a haunting role reversal, the novel depicts people fleeing from the United States into Canada.
  • Relatable Stakes: While the political themes are heavy, the emotional base remains the relationship between Lily and Jeff, two people trying to maintain their humanity in a system designed to strip it away.

Final Verdict

Ashes of the Republic is a stark reflection of the present pushed to its logical extreme. Chesterton excels at grounding high-concept political thriller elements in vivid, descriptive prose.

“The sun’s oppressive presence in the sky had retreated to a warm and more docile position just beneath the horizon.”

Recommended for: Fans of The Handmaid’s Tale, political thrillers, and speculative fiction that isn’t afraid to be provocative.


Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) A solid, unsettling start to the Ascent of Dennison Series.

“There was nothing to be said. Lily and Jeff held hands, staring out the window at the swarms of broken people everywhere. At night, they were frightening. In the day, they were heartbreaking.”


*Thank you to Meryl Moss Media and NetGalley for the Advance Reader Copy (ARC) for review consideration. I haven’t been compensated for this review and all views and opinions expressed are my own.

The Future Is Now: ‘Ashes of the Republic’ by James Chesterton

‘Ashes of the Republic’ is the forthcoming new speculative thriller by James Chesterton. Photo: Amazon

New Book Spotlight: Ashes of the Republic

A Dark Speculative Thriller by James Chesterton

In James Chesterton’s dark and thrilling futuristic satire, Ashes of the Republic, the year is 2046 and Christian Nationalism has fully consolidated power. Evidence of liberalism is subject to punishment, women’s bodies are governed by data, medical professionals have been replaced with AI, and the blueprint for authoritarian rule is no longer theoretical, it’s fully operational. It will be released on April 28 and is available for pre-order. (Meryl Moss Media, 2026)


The Plot: A Fragile Invisibility Shattered

At the center of the story is Lily Osbourne, a gifted technologist who once helped build the very systems that now govern daily life. After crossing her employer, Dennison Robotics CEO Iwanna Dennison, Lily is cast out of power and retreats into quiet anonymity.

That fragile invisibility shatters during a routine airport screening when a TSA agent informs her that she is pregnant, a state strictly controlled by the government.

In the Republic, all unregistered pregnancies are flagged. The fetus is issued a Social Security number immediately. The state is notified, and the body is no longer one’s own.

Lily and her boyfriend, Jeff Maslow, a former professor once arrested for the “crime” of reading Walt Whitman, must find a way to survive. Meanwhile, Iwanna Dennison claws her way to the highest reaches of power, driven by a psychotic and relentless ambition.


Where Fiction Meets Reality

Deeply rooted in current events, Ashes of the Republic draws from real-world debates surrounding:

  • Reproductive surveillance and the erosion of privacy.
  • The fusion of religion and state power.
  • The role of AI and data in modern governance.

Policies and ideas that felt speculative during the novel’s early drafts have since emerged as real-world court rulings, legislative proposals, and political platforms. This isn’t distant dystopia; it is a “near-now” reality where the mechanisms of control already exist, waiting only for the removal of institutional limits.


Key Themes of the Republic

  • Theocratic Surveillance: The United States has transitioned into a state governed by religious authority and high-tech monitoring.
  • Performative Democracy: Elections still happen, but they no longer carry the weight of choice.
  • Criminalized Dissent: Opposing the status quo is a high-stakes legal risk.
  • Bureaucratized Freedom: Personal liberty is slowly being filed away by administrative systems and unchallenged executive power.

This isn’t your parents’ sci-fi. The tone is controlled, unsentimental, and wickedly funny, a fast-paced thrill ride full of twists and turns.

Ashes of the Republic is the first installment in the Ascent of Dennison series. These gripping political thrillers ask a terrifying question: What happens when legal, cultural, and moral guardrails are deliberately dismantled by leaders who believe themselves divinely justified and technologically unaccountable?


About the Author: James Chesterton

James Chesterton is the author of Ashes of the Republic and Holding Patterns, a financial crime thriller inspired by his 30 years in the banking industry.

A graduate of Hunter College, he began his career teaching high school English before earning an MBA from the University of Connecticut and transitioning into corporate banking. Chesterton’s work confronts the real-world consequences of power exercised at the highest levels.


1777389168

  days

  hours  minutes  seconds

until

‘Ashes of the Republic’ release date