Book cover graphic for Pejorative: Echoes of a Nation taped to a faded U.S. flag background. Large text reads: “If you’re reading it, they didn’t win.” Handwritten-style notes surround the cover: “unusual narrative, recovered archives,” “it might be too on the nose,” “how does it end?” “rating ★★★★★,” “be part of the resistance.” A publisher warning on the cover says: “Read at your own risk. Possession of this material may be a prosecutable offense in Unity-controlled jurisdictions.”
Promotional graphic with a torn paper effect over a faded U.S. flag background. Header reads: “PEJORATIVE — No one listened.” Text: “They didn’t invade us with tanks. They erased us with broadcasts, maps, and silence. Pejorative: Echoes of a Nation is the hidden record of Canada’s annexation, an alt-history told through smuggled testimonies, scorched files, and one soldier’s desperate attempt to preserve the truth before memory itself was outlawed.” Top banner says: “Purchase a paperback or hardcover version and receive the e-book free!” Author’s name Jason G. Butterfield and social icons for Bluesky (@jasonbu.online) and Threads (@jgbutterfieldwrites) appear at the bottom.
Launch-day promotional graphic. Bold red text reads: “Available OCT 5th.” Above it: “Order Pejorative: Echoes of a Nation.” The book cover is displayed alongside a Kindle version. Amazon logo appears in a small badge, with the tagline “Available at Amazon.” Background is a faded, layered repeat of the title text.
Pejorative: Echoes of a Nation goes live this weekend.
A dystopian archive of erased memory, propaganda, and resistance, rooted in Canada, but echoing everywhere democracy frays.
On Oct 5, I finally open the archive.
Will you read the warning? Link in Bio!
#CountdownToLaunch #IndieAuthor #Dystopian