THE AKKRA CASE
Episode #256 · Written by Miriam Allen DeFord · Narrated by Scott Miller
A rare murder shatters a future society that hasn’t seen deliberate killing in decades, setting off an investigation no one is trained to conduct. But as clues twist through ideology, family secrets, and unexpected innocence, the truth emerges from the last place anyone imagined.
In The Akkra Case, Miriam Allen De Ford imagines a future so rationalized and medically optimized that homicide has been nearly erased from existence. When the body of Madolin Akkra is discovered in the sealed-off micro-wilderness of Central Park, the shock ripples through the population and through Fedpol—the federalized agency responsible for maintaining order in a world that no longer remembers how to investigate murder. With hardly a precedent to guide them, the officers fumble through theories involving ideology, psychology, and the faint remnants of forbidden subcultures.
De Ford builds a layered, immersive look at a world where conformity has replaced curiosity and where even the idea of wrongdoing has become a medical diagnosis rather than a moral failing. As the investigators fixate on the Naturists—a rebellious group that rejects synthetic comforts and preaches a return to “primitive” living—the narrative exposes how fragile utopian structures can be. Every assumption crumbles as the case becomes stranger, and the details surrounding Madolin’s final hours refuse to align with official expectations. The atmosphere is one of mounting tension, bureaucratic confusion, and quiet dread as professionals find themselves unable to adapt to a crime that defies their worldview.
Then comes the story’s brightest spark: thirteen-year-old Margret Akkra, who loved her sister fiercely and cannot bear the thought of her death becoming another unsolved anomaly. Where adults rely on doctrine, Margret relies on instinct; where the authorities limit their search to sanctioned possibilities, she slips into shadows they overlook. Her courage, resilience, and clear-sightedness—not technology—ultimately break the case open. Through her, De Ford brilliantly contrasts institutional paralysis with the raw, intuitive logic of a child who simply wants the truth.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Miriam Allen De Ford’s writing career spanned an extraordinary range. Born in 1888, she published fiction, nonfiction, journalism, and essays for more than fifty years. Her short stories were a staple of mid-century magazines, where editors relied on her ability to blend sharp contemporary insight with imaginative futurism. She wrote extensively about crime, social justice, political movements, and the psychology of belief—threads that run directly through The Akkra Case.
De Ford’s SF often tackled ideological rigidity, authoritarian benevolence, and the unintended consequences of “perfected” societies. Her journalistic background gave her a precision few writers in the field could match. Every detail in her fiction feels grounded in real-world human behavior, even when the setting is centuries removed from our own. Her stories remain compelling because they don’t simply speculate about the future—they challenge systems, question assumptions, and explore how flawed human beings navigate supposedly flawless worlds.
The Akkra Case exemplifies her strengths: a gripping mystery, a vividly realized future, and a keen awareness of how culture shapes crime, innocence, and responsibility.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to The Akkra Case by Miriam Allen De Ford — a vintage sci-fi mystery where a rare murder disrupts a future society unprepared to solve it.
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