No Face, No Service, Excerpt and short introduction by the author, John C. A. Manley

From chapter one of Much Ado About Corona...

Hands on hips, she stood behind the counter glaring at me.

“No face, no service.”

“What?” I blurted, as the door swung closed behind me, jingling a bell. “You mean: No mask, no service—right?”

“No face, no service,” she repeated. “This is a bakery, not a bank.”

The overwhelming smell of fresh sourdough penetrated the polyester fabric stretched over my nose, mouth and chin. I took a few slow steps toward the counter which separated us, shaking my head in non-understanding.

“A bank?” I replied. “What’re you talking about?”

The twenty-something girl, with bright blonde hair, raised a hand mirror from the countertop and aimed it at me.

“You look like a bank robber.”

So opens the first chapter of my novel, Much Ado About Corona: A Dystopian Love Story – a book I hope will help derail the corona craze before it’s too late.

“…politicians, governments fear books,” says Richard Evans, author of the New York Times bestseller The Christmas Box, in an interview. “Every revolution started with a book. Every single one of them — whether it is religious, cultural or political — there is always a book at the base of it.”

Uncle Tom’s Cabin had such an effect on the Civil War. When Lincoln met author Harriet Stowe he’s been quoted as saying: “So this is the little lady who started this great war.”

Alabama author Mark Childress credited Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird with having a similar impact on the civil rights movement: “I think the book really helped [white people] come to understand what was wrong with the system in the way that any number of treatises could never do, because it was popular art…”

Likewise, in the battle against totalitarianism, here are five dystopian classics:

Back in March of 2020, when lockdown began, I put down the urban fantasy novel I’d been (re)writing for the previous ten years; and picked up my pencil to write a short story set in a grim COVID future. 154,000 words later I was faced with a novel (and a sequel) about the novel coronavirus: Much Ado About Corona: A Dystopian Love Story. It’s a story which seeks not to predict the outcome of the corona hoax but to prevent it. After 1,100 hours of work the novel is now available.

I have high praise for Much Ado About Corona’s characterization, pacing, condensed truth and irony, and just the right amount of humour.—Nowick Gray, author of Chameleon: The Virtual Reality Virus