WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The End: How the Great War Was Stopped. A Novelistic Vagary cover

The End: How the Great War Was Stopped. A Novelistic Vagary

Open in WeRead

About This Book

A narrator recounts life in a picturesque hillside village while mourning a lost lover and recovering from illness under the care of an older friend and a young woman, Gabrielle. Gabrielle's séances, visions, and spiritual visitations increasingly shape the narrator's experience and the book's focus. The story charts the outbreak and progression of a vast continental war, an invasion and its repulse, juxtaposing intimate domestic grief with national crisis. Scenes shift between quiet village ritual, supernatural episodes, and wartime action, building toward a depiction of intervention—framed as divine or mystical—that ultimately brings the armed conflict to an end.

About the Author

Gratacap, L. P. portrait

L. P. Gratacap

L. P. Gratacap was an American author known for his imaginative and speculative fiction. His notable work, "A Woman of the Ice Age," explores prehistoric themes through a narrative lens that combines adventure and anthropological insight. Gratacap also delved into science fiction with titles such as "The Certainty of a Future Life in Mars," which presents a thought-provoking exploration of life beyond Earth. His writing often reflects a fascination with the intersection of history, science, and human experience, as seen in works like "The End: How the Great War Was Stopped," which offers a unique perspective on conflict and resolution. Through his diverse contributions, Gratacap has left a distinctive mark on early 20th-century literature.

More Books by This Author