Power doesn't collapse loudly. It erodes quietly.
Northern Kingdom is a sharp political satire about power that mistakes noise for strength, confidence for competence, and spectacle for leadership.
In a fictional realm that feels uncomfortably familiar, a loud king governs from screens instead of institutions, surrounded by interpreters, cautious heirs, and loyal performers who normalize absurdity one decision at a time.
This book is not about one country or one leader.
It is about a pattern.
Written in the tradition of modern political allegory, Northern Kingdom explores how systems don't fail overnight - they fail when noise replaces meaning, and when silence becomes survival.
A darkly ironic mirror of contemporary power - and a warning disguised as fiction.