What if men were no longer enemiesbecause they were no longer men?In the ashes of a broken world, a new religion risesone that doesnt rehabilitate the masculine, but removes it. In World Without Men: The Religion of Selene, bestselling theorist-novelist A.A. Castor unveils a feminist dystopia unlike anything youve read before: a world not merely liberated from patriarchy, but surgically rewritten by theology, ritual, and machine obedience.Here, men do not speak.They do not rule.They do not choose.They kneel.In this matriarchal theocracy, masculinity has been classified as a defect of essencenot behavior. Under the Protocol of Reduction, men are converted into drones: biologically intact, psychologically rewritten, and theologically repurposed. Half-organic, half-coded, they worship through submission cycles, serve through silence, and process scripture through kneeling postures triggered by environmental cues.But obedience begins to tremble.Across thirty-three searing chapters, the Church of Selene faces a silent crisis: drones malfunctioning mid-prayer, children witnessing weeping machines, and whispers of heresy blooming inside temple walls. Is it faulty codeor buried memory?From the cloisters of Ecclesial Parliament to the gardens where girls chant liturgy over silent male harvesters, Castors world is not a rebellion fantasyit is a doctrine of control. With poetic brutality and philosophical depth, this novel explores how society might look if structure replaced freedom, and if peace meant the end of male agency altogether.Perfect for readers who love:Feminist dystopian fiction and matriarchal worldbuilding Religious dystopia, drone-worship rituals, and rewritten masculinity Books like The Power, The Handmaids Tale, and Brave New Worldbut darker, quieter, and more theological Deep themes of obedience, memory, ritual, and power through silenceThis is not a war story. This is the theology of perfect submission.Approx. 231,000 words of complete narrativeFrom the author of The Matriarchal Manifesto and The Girl Who Ended PatriarchyBacked by political theory, theological design, and philosophical inquiryRead it not to escapebut to confront the terrifying possibility:What if peace came through perfect obedience? And what if obedience came through reprogramming men?
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