Propaganda Paige & the Prosperity Alliance is a time-traveling historical revenge novel set in late nineteenth-century Berlin and London, where imperial wealth, industrial expansion, and elite coordination are exposed as engines of organized cruelty rather than markers of civilization. Paige enters a world of telegraph offices, banquet halls, clubs, trains, docks, and political backrooms, tracking the men who turn extraction into policy and profit into moral language. The novel treats empire not as backdrop but as system, showing how modern power learns to travel through infrastructure, finance, logistics, and polite transnational networks while keeping blood off its gloves.
What gives the book its force is the way it makes machinery and empire feel physically connected. Alternate history, feminist revenge, anti-capitalist rage, and political horror all converge in a story where rail lines, shipping routes, telegraph wires, private clubs, and investment talk become part of the same architecture of domination. Paige moves through that architecture like a rupture, cutting through the men who believe progress excuses everything and prosperity belongs only to those who can weaponize distance. The settings are dense with smoke, iron, maps, cargo, and ceremony, but beneath all of it the target stays clear: a class of men building global comfort on other people's disposability.
Written for readers of alternative history, feminist revenge fiction, anti-imperial political horror, industrial-era speculative fiction, and violent myth-breaking historical fantasy, Propaganda Paige & the Prosperity Alliance gives the Paige sequence a more overtly imperial and infrastructural scale. It is fast, brutal, and highly legible in its anger, asking what happens when the networks that move wealth, messages, and men across borders finally face a force that refuses to admire their efficiency.