To The Last Drop: A Novel of Water, Oppression, and Rebellion

General Fiction

By Andrew Wice

Publisher : Bauu Press

To The Last Drop: A Novel of Water, Oppression, and Rebellion

ABOUT Andrew Wice

Andrew Wice
I was born Andrew David Wice in 1974 to two Political Science professors in Pittsburgh, PA. I learned to walk in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I was raised in New Jersey and Washington, D.C. In the spring of 1991, during the first Gulf War, I served as a page in the United States Senate.
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Description

To the Last Drop follows five characters through the course of a war between Texas and New Mexico. The novel begins with the accidental discovery of water in the arid southeast corner of New Mexico. Texas and New Mexico become tangled in a bitter legal dispute over the rights to that water. A series of increasingly aggressive border skirmishes leads to an invasion by the Texas State Guard.

The Texas militia sweeps aside the paltry resistance and occupies New Mexico. The conquered territory is renamed New Texas. The Military Governor exploits New Texas for its water while forcing it to pay for the cost of its own occupation.

Resistance to the Texas occupation begins in isolated pockets strung together by a pirate radio station. Censorship and brutality by Texas leads to violent reprisals by a growing insurgency. The rebellion burns in the city streets, on the internet and throughout the remote desert mountains.

The Texas State Guard overextends itself trying to guard against both the insurgency and the troublesome Mexican border. The Mexican Army invades, toppling the New Texas government. In the aftermath, the many sectarian factions gather to claim their water rights, exposing an uncertain and troubled future.