Paths Not Taken: A Chronicle of the Commune (1919–1969)

In 1969, the Commune turns fifty. The trams still run on time, the ledgers are immaculate, and the future has stopped arriving.

 

From the archives of Kraków cellars to the quiet decay of Moscow’s factory floors, Paths Not Taken is Alexander Warrick’s haunting portrait of a socialist century that never quite died, it simply became paperwork.

This is no tale of revolution’s birth, but of its middle age: the long decades when hope becomes a ledger, and utopia a maintenance schedule. Through bureaucrats, nurses, soldiers, and engineers, Warrick builds a world where ethics are measured in decimals and compassion is rationed like bread.

 

The Internationale series reimagines the 20th century through the eyes of the uncelebrated: the clerks, repairmen, and planners who hold up history’s scaffolding.

“The missiles can keep their photographs. This book keeps the mornings.”

 

If you admired the intellectual precision of Philip K. Dick, the historical depth of Harry Turtledove, and the cold realism of Orwell’s Homage to Catalonia, this is the book that continues that conversation, one quiet ledger entry at a time.

$22.99

book-author

Alexander Warrick

publisher

Edenroot Press

language

English

Series

Alexander Warrick's Alternate History Series

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Paths Not Taken: A Chronicle of the Commune (1919–1969)”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *