The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

What if the future didn't have to be dystopian?

 

In a time when every headline screams of crisis and many governments seek power instead of solutions, these stories dare to ask a radical question: What would it be like to create a better world?

 

From a professor who plants the seeds of democratic renewal in high school classrooms to farmers who fight climate change through a neighborhood newsletter; from activists who create tools that make corporate power transparent to artists who transform a city's business environment with celebratory murals—here are fantasies, not of perfection, but of possibility.

 

Meet Sandra Oaks, who transforms American democracy by remaking a generation, knowing she'll never live to see the full results. Follow Grace Larsen-Hever as she turns local weather predictions into a movement that helps farmers store carbon while protecting their crops. Watch Jason Novak discover that the solutions to his Ohio hometown's struggles might be found in the cooperative markets of Berlin. See Abby Farmer find the one person in Missouri who can stop the legislature in its tracks until it passes the climate law the state desperately needs.

 

In Sauk Water, Illinois, residents use Abraham Lincoln's own consensus-building strategy to implement ranked choice voting and transform their local politics. In Ohio, a construction contractor helps homeless families build their own cooperative apartment building while learning that sweat equity creates stronger communities than charity ever could. In Hollywood, a band of actresses goes on strike against the toxic masculinity of the movie industry.

 

These are stories about neighbors who choose cooperation over tribalism, and about citizens who reach out bravely to construct the world they want to live in. Neither utopian nor naive, these tales explore the messy, complicated, deeply human work of making things better. They imagine not a perfect world, but a perfectible one—where democracy can be strengthened, where communities can thrive, and where justice can be built from the ground up.

 

Every solution in these pages uses technology and methods available today. No miracle innovations. No superhuman leaders. Just ordinary people applying existing tools in creative ways, building change that starts small but grows like seeds scattered on fertile ground.

 

The first book in the Protopia Series, this collection of linked short stories is for readers who loved A Paradise Built in Hell, The Ministry for the Future, or The Dispossessed. It's for fans of near-future science fiction who appreciate the social sciences. But most of all, it's for everyone who is ready to see the good guys win for a change.

 

Come visit for a while in The World As It Ought to Be.

1148455890
The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

What if the future didn't have to be dystopian?

 

In a time when every headline screams of crisis and many governments seek power instead of solutions, these stories dare to ask a radical question: What would it be like to create a better world?

 

From a professor who plants the seeds of democratic renewal in high school classrooms to farmers who fight climate change through a neighborhood newsletter; from activists who create tools that make corporate power transparent to artists who transform a city's business environment with celebratory murals—here are fantasies, not of perfection, but of possibility.

 

Meet Sandra Oaks, who transforms American democracy by remaking a generation, knowing she'll never live to see the full results. Follow Grace Larsen-Hever as she turns local weather predictions into a movement that helps farmers store carbon while protecting their crops. Watch Jason Novak discover that the solutions to his Ohio hometown's struggles might be found in the cooperative markets of Berlin. See Abby Farmer find the one person in Missouri who can stop the legislature in its tracks until it passes the climate law the state desperately needs.

 

In Sauk Water, Illinois, residents use Abraham Lincoln's own consensus-building strategy to implement ranked choice voting and transform their local politics. In Ohio, a construction contractor helps homeless families build their own cooperative apartment building while learning that sweat equity creates stronger communities than charity ever could. In Hollywood, a band of actresses goes on strike against the toxic masculinity of the movie industry.

 

These are stories about neighbors who choose cooperation over tribalism, and about citizens who reach out bravely to construct the world they want to live in. Neither utopian nor naive, these tales explore the messy, complicated, deeply human work of making things better. They imagine not a perfect world, but a perfectible one—where democracy can be strengthened, where communities can thrive, and where justice can be built from the ground up.

 

Every solution in these pages uses technology and methods available today. No miracle innovations. No superhuman leaders. Just ordinary people applying existing tools in creative ways, building change that starts small but grows like seeds scattered on fertile ground.

 

The first book in the Protopia Series, this collection of linked short stories is for readers who loved A Paradise Built in Hell, The Ministry for the Future, or The Dispossessed. It's for fans of near-future science fiction who appreciate the social sciences. But most of all, it's for everyone who is ready to see the good guys win for a change.

 

Come visit for a while in The World As It Ought to Be.

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The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

by Naomi Rivkis
The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

The World As It Ought to Be (Protopia Series, #1)

by Naomi Rivkis

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Overview

What if the future didn't have to be dystopian?

 

In a time when every headline screams of crisis and many governments seek power instead of solutions, these stories dare to ask a radical question: What would it be like to create a better world?

 

From a professor who plants the seeds of democratic renewal in high school classrooms to farmers who fight climate change through a neighborhood newsletter; from activists who create tools that make corporate power transparent to artists who transform a city's business environment with celebratory murals—here are fantasies, not of perfection, but of possibility.

 

Meet Sandra Oaks, who transforms American democracy by remaking a generation, knowing she'll never live to see the full results. Follow Grace Larsen-Hever as she turns local weather predictions into a movement that helps farmers store carbon while protecting their crops. Watch Jason Novak discover that the solutions to his Ohio hometown's struggles might be found in the cooperative markets of Berlin. See Abby Farmer find the one person in Missouri who can stop the legislature in its tracks until it passes the climate law the state desperately needs.

 

In Sauk Water, Illinois, residents use Abraham Lincoln's own consensus-building strategy to implement ranked choice voting and transform their local politics. In Ohio, a construction contractor helps homeless families build their own cooperative apartment building while learning that sweat equity creates stronger communities than charity ever could. In Hollywood, a band of actresses goes on strike against the toxic masculinity of the movie industry.

 

These are stories about neighbors who choose cooperation over tribalism, and about citizens who reach out bravely to construct the world they want to live in. Neither utopian nor naive, these tales explore the messy, complicated, deeply human work of making things better. They imagine not a perfect world, but a perfectible one—where democracy can be strengthened, where communities can thrive, and where justice can be built from the ground up.

 

Every solution in these pages uses technology and methods available today. No miracle innovations. No superhuman leaders. Just ordinary people applying existing tools in creative ways, building change that starts small but grows like seeds scattered on fertile ground.

 

The first book in the Protopia Series, this collection of linked short stories is for readers who loved A Paradise Built in Hell, The Ministry for the Future, or The Dispossessed. It's for fans of near-future science fiction who appreciate the social sciences. But most of all, it's for everyone who is ready to see the good guys win for a change.

 

Come visit for a while in The World As It Ought to Be.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940182878807
Publisher: HyperSpace Express
Publication date: 10/09/2025
Series: Protopia Series
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 492 KB

About the Author

Naomi Rivkis was born in 1970 in New York City, a time and a place when anything seemed possible. She learned to be an activist at the University of Chicago, and a writer at Clarion West Writer's Workshop. Both skills went dormant for many years, while she worked as a massage therapist and raised children, but they were available when needed. 

 

In 2024, she and her family moved to the Netherlands, where she lives now with her husband, her brother-of-choice, occasional drop-in offspring, and four cats. She sings and drums with the band Kaleidofolk, which performs mostly at science fiction and filk conventions. 


Naomi Rivkis was born in New York City in 1970, a magical time and place where everything seemed possible. She learned activism at the University of Chicago, and writing at Clarion West Writer's Workshop, before putting both skills temporarily on the back burner to work as a massage therapist and raise children. Both were resurrected as the world became more alarming. 

In 2024 she emigrated to the Netherlands, where she lives with her husband, her chosen brother, occasional visiting children and four cats. She's part of a folk band called Kaleidofolk, which mostly plays at SF and filk conventions.

Did you enjoy this book? Please consider giving it a review on Goodreads or wherever you purchased it! And contact the author at her web page for information about future publications. There are more Protopia stories coming!

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