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The Last Nuclear War by HAZEM ABDELMOWLA

The Last Nuclear War

By Hazem Abdelmowla

In a fractured world reborn from viral ruins, energy is scarce and power is currency. Mousa, a gifted child adrift in a society ruled by influence...

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You wonder why war? But what if you are the war! What will you choose? What will you do for the sake of this world?

In the future, after decades of surviving devastating viral pandemics, the world has become very different from what we know. Energy sources no longer exist like before. The world has become like a compass where its parts are looking for nuclear influence. A smart child named Mousa was born. He had difficulty understanding the world around him. Why is he treated differently in school? Why doesn’t he feel social justice? What happened to corrupt the world like this? What is happening between the parties of the world? What is the role of influence and money? The questions were getting more complex at every point in his life. But he didn’t know that the path of answers was destined to ask him for choices that could determine the fate of the last future nuclear war.

Availability

available

Publish Date

2024-08-29

Published Year

2024

ISBN 13

979-8338150627

ASIN

B0D6BM58QS

Format

Kindle Edition

Language

English

Print Length

238

Average Ratings

Readers Feedback

A Provocative Concept Undermined by Uneven Execution – Review for The Last Nuclear War by Hazem Abdelmowla

The Last Nuclear War presents a gripping premise with clear relevance to today’s world. The author succeeds in raising urgent questions about survival, politics, and...Read More

A Provocative Concept Undermined by Uneven Execution – Review for The Last Nuclear War by Hazem Abdelmowla
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A Provocative Concept Undermined by Uneven Execution – Review for The Last Nuclear War by Hazem Abdelmowla

The Last Nuclear War presents a gripping premise with clear relevance to today’s world. The author succeeds in raising urgent questions about survival, politics, and humanity under the shadow of total destruction, and the thematic ambition is commendable. Unfortunately, the novel’s execution does not fully match its scope. The narrative structure feels fragmented, with abrupt shifts that weaken immersion. Dialogue often reads stiff and expository rather than natural, and the descriptive passages, while vivid in places, lean on repetition. Editing inconsistencies, grammatical slips, pacing lags, and overuse of melodrama, distract from the otherwise compelling subject.

As a reading experience, the book is engaging enough to keep interest, especially for fans of post-apocalyptic fiction, but it lacks the polish and refinement expected of professional-grade work. With tighter editing, stronger character development, and more disciplined pacing, this could have been a powerful entry into the genre.

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A Provocative Concept Undermined by Uneven Execution – Review for The Last Nuclear War by Hazem Abdelmowla

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