Apple Lake Publishing
Schaumburg, Illinois ♦ (866) 725-9920

Introducing A Novel on Internal Corruption
Revealing Historical Fiction about the American School System


A Novel with a Novel Subject
 
Brace yourselves for some shocking revelations. The observations recorded here are hidden from sight  and will seem implausible. They are common occurrences.

Synopsis: Some well-meaning teachers fight corruption, underground societies, and smear campaigns while system-indoctrinated, puppet teachers spend their more sinister energies spawning community prejudice against those who won't follow gang mentality. Children are used as pawns and eventually become targets of infighting smear tactics.

 

    Social Order in an American                 School  System

 Injury, a semi-fictional novel out of necessity, reveals a mischievous underground in the public schools. The author's thirty-two years as a public school teacher give her credibility. Her story presents and examines cases similar to situations that happened. Teacher protagonists within the tale tell of a lawless network used to create an environment of fear. In essence, this limited account is a microcosm of a larger, widespread social dilemma, an abiding, resident dehumanization process existing in America, and, of course, elsewhere in the world. 

Plot: Jill Franklin, the sparring heroine, in Dylan Miller's story, is convinced the postal shootings and student shootings are related and, thus, she spends much of her free time in law libraries reading published reviews of court cases concerning abused employees. She believes she'll find clues that connect violence in other workplace environments to the schools. As she digs, she finds the higher courts nearly always uphold the abusers over the abused--in cases of employment harassment.

Though Difficult to Prove:

     The System and the Shootings are Connected

These student shooters were continually victimized long before they became violent. Within the schools, in-fighting carries over to the students. Articles written about the school shootings describe surviving shooters with eery, self-satisfied smiles after killing sprees. These are the same impudent smiles sported by hundreds of perverted system flunkies while gleefully pouncing on one purposely isolated victim at a time. 

Students may experience system mobbing when their test scores lower the school's academic rating. Discipline of troubled youths may fall into the hands of student bullies who follow standard harassment procedures accomplishing the noteworthy task of troubling their young victims into dangerous states of mental agitation. Of course there is an adult instigator (often a teacher) who merely has to behave with prejudice toward one child and, forthwith, a favored squad of adolescents looking for recreation will receive the covert message that this "picked on" classmate is acceptable prey.

 

                 Author Contributes                    An abundance of Inside Information

Author Dylan Miller provides detailed and analyzed accounts of teachers, parents, students and major courtroom cases which prove the deviate behavior of establishment -condoned sub-cultures "is" the root cause of violent reprisals in the American workplace and of the sad contagion of student shootings (no matter how many personal issues are attached to the underlying, well-hidden authentic cause.)

 

Injury is a story aimed at the viciousness of group mentality. Jill Franklin (the protagonist) and her friends combat a destructive subculture with verbal fencing and some effective, humorous, and well merited retaliation of their own.

  

 

Did you ever see a teacher suddenly,
and inexplicably go down hill?

Would you like a logical explanation for the school shootings?




 E-mail us today to learn more about the corrupt culture within the American school system and its link to the corporate culture.