An Experiment

Nazis are bad, okay?

Do I really have to spell it out? 2020 says yes. Nazis are bad. We fought a war over this. I don't like them, and neither should you.

I wrote Sisters in 2016 as an experiment in human behavior. If the outcome of WWII was different, and the circumstances were bad enough, how would ordinary people react to a growing Nazi presence in their lives if the Final Solution was covered up and buried deep within a vault somewhere?


Sisters is not a political manifesto nor an endorsement of Nazism. Characters express controversial views because they are a product of their environment. I do not share these views. I do not support the Nazi party nor its actions.


Phrases and themes from the Third Reich appear throughout the novel.


We can all agree on the fact that the actions of the Third Reich were horrific. I oppose all forms of racism, hatred, and the violent ideology of Nazism.


However, to omit the reality of what the Third Reich could have become would give you an inaccurate picture of Ann and Kathy's world and would gloss over the horrors of what could have been. Children raised in Weathers’ regime were fed Nazi propaganda and know nothing else.


This is a work of fiction that takes a deep look at humanity, history, and a possible outcome that, thankfully, never happened and hopefully never will.


Resist today, resist tomorrow, resist forever.


V.L. Noxon