An Amazon Bestseller—#1 in Hot New Releases and a Top 20 title in Action & Adventure Literary Fiction. Praised as “an alternate history masterpiece,” “tense,” “cinematic,” and “eerily plausible.” If you’re drawn to sweeping, plot-driven stories that feel epic—and all too possible—discover why early readers are calling The Last Good Queen of These United States “a gripping, edge-of-your-seat thriller” and “the best blend of history, science fiction, and rebellion this year.” What if the British Empire won the American Revolution—and never let go? By 2052, the Empire spans continents, ruling from its capital in New York. Decades of global war have reduced Parliament to a puppet, fueled mass surveillance, and entrenched royal control. The thirst for freedom never fully died—but five revolts have failed. Now, for the first time in a generation, a sudden rupture inside the Royal Family opens a crack in the armor—and the fractured rebellion has one last chance to strike. This isn’t just a “what if” story. It’s a high-stakes epic that moves from the battlefields of Texas to palace intrigue in Bombay, from the rebel cells of Montreal to airstrikes over Sicily. It’s about resistance in the face of tyranny, the cost of loyalty, and the terrible weight of trying to build something better from the wreckage. The Last Good Queen bridges the Founders’ vision and the political anxieties of the present. It asks what happens when truth becomes a threat, power answers only to itself, and the institutions meant to protect liberty collapse. At the heart of it all are two unforgettable rebels: Alexandra Baker , a war-hardened journalist silenced by betrayal, now forced to choose between witnessing history—or making it. - Andrew Greg , a brilliant insurgent tactician who’s spent his life fighting for a cause he may never live to see. Their choices—and their sacrifices—will shape the fate of a global uprising. This novel rewards readers who want more. And that’s intentional. Yes, it’s fast-paced: sabotage missions, air battles, underground alliances, and irreversible decisions. But it’s also layered: multiple POVs, shifting loyalties, emotional weight, and deep thematic threads. If you’re looking for something breezy, this might not be your match. But if you want speculative fiction that challenges power , complicates its heroes , and trusts your intelligence — The Last Good Queen was written for you. For fans of: The Handmaid’s Tale (for its worldbuilding and moral unease) - The Americans (for its character-driven espionage) - The Man in the High Castle (for its haunting alternate reality) - The Expanse and Dune (for their scale and philosophical depth) - Andor and Ken Follett’s Century Trilogy (for their anti-imperial sweep and generational arcs) “Shades of Clancy, Crichton, and Bond—this is a must-read for fans of military thrillers and alt-history.” “One of those rare speculative novels that makes a sharp political point while telling a truly engaging story.” Shades of Clancy, Crichton, and Bond-this is a must-read for fans of military thrillers and alt-history. One of those rare speculative novels that makes a sharp political point while telling a truly engaging story.