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Endless Tribulation: In Small Town and In Small Country
Coles
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Endless Tribulation: In Small Town and In Small Country in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $13.56


By None
Endless Tribulation: In Small Town and In Small Country in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $13.56
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
A small provincial town in a fragile democracy becomes the stage for rising communism, military dictatorship, and quiet heroism, as ordinary families are drawn into waves of political vengeance, corruption, and violence. Early hopes tied to popular elections and free speech slowly curdle into control of unions, utilities, and media, while homes, workplaces, and even churches are pulled into ideological struggle. Across decades, peasants, professionals, local officials, soldiers, servants, and landlords see their private lives twisted by propaganda, informants, and the ever‑present fear of denunciation. Yet amid repression, illness, and poverty, small acts of courage—rescuing a child, refusing to betray a neighbor, standing up to abuse—persist as stubborn reminders of a different moral order. Moving between town, city, and remote countryside, the story shows how a whole small country can slide from hopeful democracy into tyranny, while its most humble people unexpectedly become the guardians of its conscience. Readers who may enjoy this story include those drawn to politically charged historical fiction, especially set in Latin America, and interested in how ideology and power shape ordinary lives over time. It will particularly appeal to readers who like multi‑generational sagas, morally complex characters, and narratives that blend intimate family drama with social critique of dictatorship, corruption, and quiet, everyday acts of resistance.
A small provincial town in a fragile democracy becomes the stage for rising communism, military dictatorship, and quiet heroism, as ordinary families are drawn into waves of political vengeance, corruption, and violence. Early hopes tied to popular elections and free speech slowly curdle into control of unions, utilities, and media, while homes, workplaces, and even churches are pulled into ideological struggle. Across decades, peasants, professionals, local officials, soldiers, servants, and landlords see their private lives twisted by propaganda, informants, and the ever‑present fear of denunciation. Yet amid repression, illness, and poverty, small acts of courage—rescuing a child, refusing to betray a neighbor, standing up to abuse—persist as stubborn reminders of a different moral order. Moving between town, city, and remote countryside, the story shows how a whole small country can slide from hopeful democracy into tyranny, while its most humble people unexpectedly become the guardians of its conscience. Readers who may enjoy this story include those drawn to politically charged historical fiction, especially set in Latin America, and interested in how ideology and power shape ordinary lives over time. It will particularly appeal to readers who like multi‑generational sagas, morally complex characters, and narratives that blend intimate family drama with social critique of dictatorship, corruption, and quiet, everyday acts of resistance.

















