A sharp, provocative satire on wealth, power, and what inheritance really means in society.
This collection of imagined debates and parables uses the idea of “dead men’s shoes” to question who benefits from enormous fortunes and how society should respond to inherited wealth and privilege.
In these pages, readers encounter a culture where large fortunes sit like houseboats on the highway of life, guarded by an army of loyal followers and contested by the barefoot poor. Through fable‑like scenes and dramatic voices, the work probes the costs of inequality and the tension between labor, ownership, and moral duty. The material shifts between allegory and polemic, offering a stark critique of class and money in a time of social upheaval.
- Rich, symbolic imagery that reinterprets inheritance and property as social forces.
- Satirical debates surrounding labor, capital, and the rights of the many versus the few.
- Vivid allegories that illuminate concerns about wealth, class structure, and moral responsibility.
- A historical voice from 1916 that mixes prophecy, critique, and calls for reform.
Ideal for readers of social satire, economic history, and provocative essays that challenge traditional views on property and society.