2028

... and Australia has gone to hell in a handbasket

Fiction & Literature, Humorous
Cover of the book 2028 by Ken Saunders, Allen & Unwin
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Author: Ken Saunders ISBN: 9781760636982
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Publication: August 29, 2018
Imprint: Allen & Unwin Language: English
Author: Ken Saunders
ISBN: 9781760636982
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Publication: August 29, 2018
Imprint: Allen & Unwin
Language: English

'I've found the Australian Douglas Adams!' - Tom Gleeson
'Hilarious.' - Wendy Harmer
'It's awesome.' - H.G. Nelson
'Absurdly funny.' - Sami Shah
'The revolution is coming.' - Cathy Wilcox
'Highly amusing.' - John Doyle
'Fizzing with ideas.' - Dominic Knight

  1. Prime Minister Fitzwilliams' instincts tell him it's time to call a snap election. His cabinet team is adequate (just), the howling protests of the doctors after the GP changes has finally died down and, best of all, the Australian Greens are in receivership. So what could possibly go wrong?

The PM is prepared for everything until he finds himself facing what he least expected - an actual opposition. How do you deal with a party that doesn't play by the rules, protests in the nude, sends mail by carrier pigeon and has a list of candidates all called Ned Ludd?

Welcome to the Australia of 2028 where parking meters double as poker machines, radio shock jocks have been automated, the Communist Party of China has turned itself into a multinational corporation and ASIO's glory days are so far over that it's resorting to surveillance of a Charles Dickens reading group.

Outrageous, sharp and wickedly funny, 2028 takes us into the near future where the not very good ideas around today have become ten years worse.

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'I've found the Australian Douglas Adams!' - Tom Gleeson
'Hilarious.' - Wendy Harmer
'It's awesome.' - H.G. Nelson
'Absurdly funny.' - Sami Shah
'The revolution is coming.' - Cathy Wilcox
'Highly amusing.' - John Doyle
'Fizzing with ideas.' - Dominic Knight

  1. Prime Minister Fitzwilliams' instincts tell him it's time to call a snap election. His cabinet team is adequate (just), the howling protests of the doctors after the GP changes has finally died down and, best of all, the Australian Greens are in receivership. So what could possibly go wrong?

The PM is prepared for everything until he finds himself facing what he least expected - an actual opposition. How do you deal with a party that doesn't play by the rules, protests in the nude, sends mail by carrier pigeon and has a list of candidates all called Ned Ludd?

Welcome to the Australia of 2028 where parking meters double as poker machines, radio shock jocks have been automated, the Communist Party of China has turned itself into a multinational corporation and ASIO's glory days are so far over that it's resorting to surveillance of a Charles Dickens reading group.

Outrageous, sharp and wickedly funny, 2028 takes us into the near future where the not very good ideas around today have become ten years worse.

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