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Read the Note

Using Fiction to Make Policy More…Realistic

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Idea

Combining narrative and nonfiction to create a new form of book—and means of policy influence.

Incubation

Peter Singer wrote multiple award-winning nonfiction books prior to coming to New America. But for his exploration of the future of war and technology, he created a unique blend of thrilling fiction and deep-dive research designed to both entertain and inform. Co-authored with August Cole, his book Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War combined the format of a techno-thriller with over 400 endnote references to explore what armed conflict between the United States, China, and Russia might look like. Its scenarios were not only grounded in real research, but also allowed the project to warn of potential dangers ahead, inspire readers to action via a non-traditional format, and reach a larger audience.

Impact

The result was a best-selling book read at both summer beach vacations and military officer courses. The project’s “useful fiction” model became a phenomenon, influencing military projects and tactics (a three billion dollar Navy program was even named after it), sparking congressional legislation and investigations, and changing professional military education (Ghost Fleet was featured on multiple professional reading lists for the military services and even became the basis of a course at National War College). Singer has since spoken on the project’s lessons at over 300 venues ranging from the White House and Pentagon to CIA and Congress.

Using Fiction to Make Policy More…Realistic

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