Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Crumbling of a Nation and other stories

Rate this book
Ryan David Ginsberg bursts onto the literary scene with this hauntingly beautiful collection of satirical and speculative tales. From extraterrestrials observing Earth to human beings navigating dark, dystopian futures shaped by technology, capitalism, and authoritarianism, each story offers sharp, thought-provoking commentary on the state of our nation.

With a blend of dark humor and shattering insight, this collection takes readers on a compelling journey through the absurdities and shortcomings of modern life and the near future. As an added bonus, this collection concludes with the first three chapters of Ginsberg’s (hopeful) debut novel, In the Algorithm We Trust.

Author

RYAN DAVID GINSBERG is a writer of fiction and poetry, currently working on his debut novel. He lives in the Central Valley of California with his wife, three dogs, and a bougainvillea bonsai tree, named Boogey, which is currently blossoming.



Extra

Within these stories, you will meet a woman who must auction her unborn baby's rights away; a twelve-year-old boy who suddenly finds himself in the middle of a war; an extraterrestrial being sent to Earth to determine whether or not humans are worthy of an invitation to the Confederation of the Cosmos; a mother who sends her child to school in a bulletproof vest; an old man who has only two months to live; a genius who strives to eradicate sadness from the world; a young girl impregnated by force in a state where abortion is outlawed; a grandmother teaching her granddaughter about the origins of the universe; a teacher who fights against the censors of her local school; a PhD candidate whose worst nightmare is recorded by dozens and posted online for millions; an artist seeking fame in a world where all are famous; and a sneak peek at the author's (hopeful) debut novel, In The Algorithm We Trust.

182 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 25, 2024

143 people are currently reading
4187 people want to read

About the author

Ryan David Ginsberg

6 books56 followers
RYAN DAVID GINSBERG is a writer of fiction and poetry. He lives in the Central Valley of California with his wife and three dogs.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
135 (31%)
4 stars
150 (35%)
3 stars
102 (23%)
2 stars
28 (6%)
1 star
11 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 77 reviews
Profile Image for Gina Baldoni.
23 reviews
January 3, 2025
Fictional short stories that could easily be real life... probably one of the scariest books I've read. This book should be read by every American citizen.
Profile Image for Star Zhang.
389 reviews11 followers
November 24, 2024
Chilling. Maybe I'll stick to dystopian stories that are slightly further from real life moving forward. This was an uncomfortable read.
Profile Image for Always-think-critically.
96 reviews
December 21, 2024
Definitely an interesting and different read. Very Black Mirror like with the dystopian/government taking over your lives in every possible way, but focused on current Trump conservative ideals. So not far from the truth…many of the stories were disturbing to say the least. But I liked that Ginsberg wrote bluntly

3 stars because the first story, to me, was not a strong opening. I would have put that in the middle of the collection because I was close to returning the book. And I know these are short stories, but the author’s writing was pretty repetitive and frankly annoying at times. For example, you’ve already set the scene, you don’t need to continue doing so while using 2-3 word phrases. Move on with the writing.

This was a similar issue with the sneak peek to “In the Algorithm We Trust.” I could not continue past the first chapter because of the extreme overuse of the word “perfect.” The reader understands that this dystopian world is ruled by AI who curates every aspect of your life via an Algorithm. No need to write “perfect” in almost every other sentence as this ruins the flow and is irritating.

If Ginsberg reads this, I sincerely hope he takes this as constructive criticism because his story lines are ON IT. The delivery needs work, but not too much
463 reviews11 followers
January 22, 2025
I fell for the TikTok promos...
Dark humor, short stories, speculative fiction--- all my favorite genres. I was primed to love this, but it fell so short. This book wants to be a horror story, a huge flashing warning sign. Instead, it is a road cone on a dark highway. It points out the problem, but doesn't give us a chance to react or the space and perspective to see our predicament.

Many of the premises felt cribbed from news stories or other media. That would have been fine, except that it was all tell and no show. Everything is from a 3rd person omniscient view. We aren't allowed to relate to any of the characters. We watch them do things.

And I get that that's supposed to be part of the horror of it. That they are supposed to mirror us, as we simply keep going along in the terrifying world in which we exist. But we *feel* things. These characters don't. There is no foreshadowing. There is no twist. There is no lesson. We simply walk along with these characters in their complicity and feel nothing, learn nothing about their worlds or about ourselves.
Profile Image for Jillian Humke.
30 reviews1 follower
October 13, 2025
i read this primarily to look for literature for speech and debate and there is definitely some good stuff in there. i think some of the stories were a little unrealistic, like i didn’t know how the actions in our world could lead to the dystopian world. maybe that’s a harsh critique though. it served the purpose i wanted it to
Profile Image for Riley Birchall.
78 reviews1 follower
April 15, 2025
uncomfortable, some of the stories i had to shut the kindle for a bit bc ive never read dystopian like this. could easily see some of these stories being a reality. but nonetheless, liked how this made me really think.
Profile Image for when_the_rest_of_heaven_was_blue.
160 reviews15 followers
October 16, 2024
I love dystopian books so much. This book was really fun to read because it dealt with modern issues, stuff I am seeing today taken to the extreme.
The story of the cover of this book is also insane as well.
10/10 would recommend.

(There was one story that I didn’t enjoy, that is why it is not 5 stars, I would still recommend the book though!)
20 reviews
March 15, 2025
So quick, so alarming, but so relevant. A warning, a call to action, a MUST READ
33 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2025
This book is severely flawed… however, I will give the author credit for choosing some good subject matters. Nonetheless, none of the stories felt fully flushed out, only offering a brief cliffnotes look into the stories’ world. Now, I am well aware these are short stories; however, the author never managed to get me to connect with any of characters. In fact, none of them actually felt like characters; they more felt like avatars to briefly glimpse the world they are in.
Profile Image for cherubees.
23 reviews2 followers
January 31, 2025
DNF @ 48 pages. Incredibly boring & predictable. Was hoping for something like Black Mirror :/ Also, not a fan of the author using AI for the cover originally
Profile Image for Norren.
144 reviews15 followers
June 25, 2025
Here are my reviews of every short story with the overall at the end.

P1: Tommy Longhorn- Not a fan of alien stories. I'm surprised the collection about critiquing America started with this. 1/5

P2: Amber's Son- "They were just kids when their captain, Heather's Son, yelled, 'attack!'" God. This is more like what I was expecting. The layers to this one. Children fighting war adults sent them too, everyone being their mother's child instead of their own names to show all soliders are someone's kids and helpless to the decisions of their leaders. I sincerely think I will never forget this short story. 5/5

P3: A Million Times Over Again- This one definitely wasn't my favorite. The ending, however, was quite touching. 2/5

P4: It Was Just Another Day in America- Oh... Oh that's enough to make me tear up. 5/5

P5: Preparing to Die- I think this story has a lot less effect on me since I've never had to make arrangements before/after a death before. Still, it's unsettling to see how streamlined it is in this story. 3/5

P6: The Crumbling of a Nation- Good. Let himself feel guilt. Also love that this is halfway through the book. Feels like it's symbolic events coming half way to fruition. 4/5

P7: The Termination Bureau- Handmaid's Tale-esk, if not somehow worse (not the writing. The writing was great. The treatment of human beings being the worse thing). Love that he chose to have this take place in Florida, and all the talk of citizenship makes me wonder what would have happened if Jocelyn or her father weren't citizens. 5/5

P8: A Baby is Born- We love corporate America! 5/5

P9: Love, the Way God Intended- I frankly don't have the energy to write things right now. It's good. 4/5

P10: We See You- Harrowing and disturbing. The bystander effect is terrifying. 5/5

P11: The Unknown Writer- Poor guy. 2/5

P12: Bye, Bye Sadness- I doubt other big corporate CEOs have this sort of guilt, but I wish they did. 5/5

P13: Ch1-3 of In the Algorithm We Trust- My curiosity is piqued and I need to know more. 5/5

Overall: I averaged everything to get the rating of a 3.9. 4/5 stars! This book is very haunting, considering the current state of the world in multiple ways. Ginsberg encapsulates so many issues we face, or are on the cusp of facing, and doesn't sugar coat a bit of it. I can't wait to read Ginsberg's full novel of In the Algorithm We Trust!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Trent.
33 reviews
June 1, 2025
From the very first short story, I was in awe. This book was easy to read and fast paced since it was made up of multiple short stories; however, none of them were lost on me. I remember each of these stories and the impact it made on me. The twists in each one made each dose of this collection more and more potent, and I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
Profile Image for Michaela.
5 reviews1 follower
January 7, 2025
In reality, I’d give this book 3.5 out of five stars. The writing was really good. I do just feel like some topics could’ve been talked about better. This book also starts out a bit weird. The first chapter didn’t really draw me in, and I kind of had to force myself until the end of the chapter which made sense after you’ve read the whole thing and it’s kind of like whoa, but Until that point I was confused on how any of this was relevant. I feel like it went into a bit too much detail on certain aspects of the alien that it was talking about that weren’t too important to the storyline it was trying to portray, it kind of took away of the important aspect and message it was trying to show us. Overall, though this was a really good book certain short stories were better than others, but that might’ve just been because I could visualize them better throughout points in my life.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Lola.
183 reviews8 followers
August 17, 2024
Buku ini berisi kumpulan cerita pendek yg menghadirkan berbagai karakter yg menghadapi situasi ekstrem di dunia 💣 Di setiap ceritanya menawarkan pandangan mendalam tentang kehidupan manusia 🔥

Di samping itu, seluruh ceritanya mencerminkan nilai-nilai budaya yg berbeda, seperti perdebatan moral tentang HAM & kebebasan seseorang ❤️ Situasi ini terlihat dalam cerita tentang seseorang jenius yg ingin menghapus kesedihan dari dunia 😔

Di sisi lain, setiap ceritanya jg dipengaruhi oleh isu-isu sejarah & politik ❤️ Seperti, peperangan & kebijakan yg mengekang kebebasan seseorang, seperti dalam cerita tentang gadis muda yg hamil akibat kekerasan di negara yg melarang aborsi 🔥

Buku ini menyampaikan pesan tentang pentingnya kemanusiaan & empati dalam menghadapi ketidakadilan & penderitaan ❤️ Di setiap ceritanya, aku merasakan & memahami perasaan tokoh-tokohnya 🙃 Misalnya, penderitaan seorang anak yg terjebak dalam perang 😭

Di samping itu, banyak cerita dalam buku ini sebagai kritik terhadap sistem sosial & politik yg ada ❤️😂 Misalnya saja, cerita tentang seorang guru yg melawan sensor di sekolahnya 🔥 Aku terhubung dengan dia, bagaimana kebebasan berpendapat & pendidikan seringkali dikekang oleh otoritas 🔥

Meskipun banyak ceritanya yg menampilkan situasi yg suram, tp pesan keseluruhan buku ini adalah tentang mencari harapan di tengah keputusasaan 🙂
Profile Image for Ashley.
17 reviews
January 11, 2025
This was a difficult read, for good reasons.

All in all, I really appreciated this book, it's probably the first one I've ever wanted to really annotate. 

I only have a few minor criticisms. The first being some of the grammar, sentence structure, and redundancy of some sentences in the first two chapters but after that it the author seems to find his rhythm.

The second is that some chapters really needed a trigger warning, specifically The Termination Bureau and We See You chapters. Readers my find other chapters hard to read but these two were the worst for me. Some of the TW for these two are: graphic abortion, gore, SA. So reader beware. Other themes to beware of are child death.

Personally, I still really liked this book, it had me hooked from beginning to end. The stories are short enough and powerful enough to keep me engaged and challenged. My favorite chapter was A Million Times Over Again. The ending to that one had me very wtf, and not knowing how I felt about it. The rest of the stories were a mix of too real and not too distant dystopian, good for 2025. I'm excited to read the next book Ryan comes out with, hopefully In The Algorithm We Trust.
Profile Image for Elle.
79 reviews
September 14, 2025
Here's a story inspired by this collection's subtle, artful prose:

A little boy put on his hat and picked up his backpack to walk to school.

"I am innocent," he said.

His mother, who'd been busy firing rounds at the immigrant family who lived next door, holstered her Cool Ranch Doritos-branded pistol just long enough to tell him goodbye.

"Once you pop, you just can't stop," she said.

"Those kinds just need a little motivation to pray to our lord and savior," she explained.

"By the way, I put the check for our Diamond Ultra Plus insurance bill in the mail this morning," she said.

The boy walked to school, looking at all the plastic bags snagged on barren tree branches, the black puddles of crude oil...

Suddenly, a car hopped the curb and ran him over.

The very important CEO in the driver's seat honked his horn: BEEEP! BEEEP! BEEEP!

"You're fired," he said enragedly.

An ambulance pulled up and began to search the boy's bloodied backpack. When they failed to locate a credit card in any of its pockets, they sped off again.

A bald eagle screeched as it flew overhead.
16 reviews
May 13, 2025
Wow. For a debut work the stories in this collection are poignant and incredibly well written. Although I have a few gripes, they are mostly stylistic choices - things like when a longer thought would get going and be ended abruptly with ellipses. Aside from that the stories were interesting and fast paced. I found “A Million Times Over Again” particularly beautiful and a prime example of the voice this author can imbue into his characters. The messages conveyed through each short were clear and relevant, and although perhaps they could have been communicated with a little more subtly I think the message would not have left as strong a mark. I am personally incredibly impressed and found some great meaning in this collection, although with the subject matter not all sections can be described as enjoyable.
Profile Image for Max.
10 reviews
June 8, 2025
I only made it about 100 pages into this book before I had to put it down. The writing and pacing were difficult to get through, and the stories relied too heavily on shock value, which quickly becomes tiresome. There wasn’t enough character development to feel anything. We’d meet a character for a moment, like a boy who ends up finding his best friend dead, and we’re just expected to feel something without knowing who these people are. Even in short stories, characters need to be fleshed out to make an impact.

Instead of trying to fit so many stories into one book, I wish the author had focused on just a few and given them the depth they deserve, especially since the topics are serious and sensitive, and they deserve more care. Honestly, I’m disappointed I bought this. It had potential, but it just didn’t land for me
Profile Image for Isla Woodfin.
44 reviews
June 23, 2025
I picked this up after watching a Instagram reel recommending it, it sounded interesting and quite topical. However I feel a little disappointed as the stories were very generic, predictable and very ‘surface level deep’ .This book could maybe serve as a teenagers introduction to dystopian fiction? Even then I’ve read young adult fiction with more depth and nuance. The author also makes a comment about rape culture in one short story and in the very next one describes a woman and only refers to her form that point on as “the large breasted woman” with her ‘talent’ being just shaking her breasts…
Yeah… I am giving it two stars as there was a few stories I did find pleasant. Just not enough to read again.
2 reviews
October 12, 2025
As a fan of dystopian fiction and politics, I thought this book would be right up my alley. While the intention was clear, the content of the stories themselves lacked depth. Every story was a glaring commentary on the political and social climate of the United States that felt spelled out letter by letter. The ideas are tired, overdone, and frankly, obvious. It would be a good introduction to someone who doesn’t follow any sort of politics or read any sort of dystopian fiction, or perhaps to Americans who are still blind to the problems they face in their country. But speaking as someone not from the US, we’ve known your nation has been crumbling, it’s not news. You’ve just taken a long time to catch up.
8 reviews
August 12, 2025
I’ve chose to look into this book after seeing the Author speak about it on TikTok and as a fan of short stories the description intrigued me. I will say a few of the stories could have been a bit more fleshed out, with a couple leaving the reader wanting more. I also am curious with the excerpt from what will be the author’s debut novel what the overall statement is? While I find it well written and a highly entertaining read it does make me think is the young man from the final story going to continue on with this existence as created or eventually push against it and create something new. I will definitely be keeping an eye on this author because I’m very curious.
5 reviews
October 11, 2025
New author, bright future.

I saw this author talking about this book on TikTok, and the excitement from him made me buy it. The stories are great, a bit politically charged, but thankfully lean the way that I believe. The storytelling and word flow I think will improve in time as he grows more as an author, but I definitely look forward to reading the rest of the algorithm when it finishes. Some of the senses were chunky and abrupt but again I think that will improve a time and I’m looking forward to his next book.
2 reviews
April 26, 2024
I was able to read an advance copy of this book before publication and all I can is WOW! While I had read a few of the stories in his earlier book another day in America, the stories feel far more polished than their earlier versions. And the new stories are even more incredible. I feel incredibly lucky to have read this classic book before it has even been released. I hope this book gets the attention it deserves.
1 review
August 29, 2024
So, I purchased this book and read it in a day. The reason why the stories sound familiar is because we are either living them in real time or we have experienced them in some way. This author has taken the misinformation and pain of an entire country and turned it into short stories that we have the patience to read and relate to.The stories are beautiful and heartbreaking all at once. I definitely recommend reading if you love books that make you feel a plethora of emotions.
Profile Image for victoria.bookreads.
83 reviews2 followers
July 7, 2025
4.5 stars

Read this in one sitting per my girlfriend’s recommendation. I liked it a lot more than I thought I would. This book is comprised of 12 short stories, all with different themes.

Some were very dystopian, some sad, some were uncomfortably relevant to today’s world.

I would definitely recommend this book to anyone, especially anyone passionate about human rights and similar conversations.
Profile Image for Jessie S.
119 reviews
October 19, 2024
Great quick read of dystopian short stories that felt a little too real in America in 2024. If you like dystopian fiction that have a lot of metaphors for troubling trends happening in American currently, this is the book for you. I'd never read a book of short stories before, and I enjoyed it more than I thought I would.
Profile Image for Tina Guerrero.
139 reviews
November 2, 2024
I'm only a few stories in and this is already getting 5 stars from me. I'm enthralled with this and I have so many feelings and thoughts going through my head I need to put the book down for a nap just to be able to keep reading but like in the best way possible. THIS is the kind of stuff I want to talk about when I'm around people I enjoy, this this this. It's very.... Very.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 77 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.