1985 is not a sequel to 1984.
It is what happened next.
Set in the fractured afterglow of a culture told it had already been explained, 1985 is a cinematic, experimental novel that moves through memory, music, movement, and signal. Blending literary fiction with speculative philosophy, the book follows a constellation of artists, wanderers, and outsiders navigating the spaces between collapse and awakening-between what was written and what was actually lived.
Told through layered narration, poetic transmissions, and cinematic sequences, 1985 unfolds across freight trains, lofts, abandoned venues, highways, and dreamlike cities that seem to remember those who pass through them. Time bends. Identity refracts. History hums beneath the surface like a carrier signal waiting to be decoded.
Drawing inspiration from the lineage of Philip K. Dick, J.G. Ballard, and post-industrial American literature, 1985 explores themes of:
Cultural memory and erased histories
Art as resistance and transmission
Surveillance, signal, and the politics of perception
Indigenous cosmology and ancestral time
Music, frequency, and embodied consciousness
The difference between propaganda and lived truth
This is a novel for readers who feel the gap between official narratives and personal experience-who recognize that something vital survived the end of the twentieth century, moving underground, traveling by sound and story instead of headlines.
Both intimate and expansive, 1985 resists genre confinement. It is part road novel, part philosophical meditation, part cinematic ritual. It asks not who controls the future, but who remembers how to listen.
If 1984 was the warning, 1985 is the signal still transmitting.
Perfect for readers of experimental literary fiction, speculative realism, countercultural history, metaphysical novels, and post-modern American storytelling.