About This Book
A first-person account by an army chemist depicts an invasion by an eastern adversary wielding anti-gravity transports and a terrifying weapon that chemically degenerates solid ground into elemental hydrogen, producing catastrophic aerial conflagrations. Western forces respond with sudden technological breakthroughs, notably a device that converts sunlight into usable electrical power and wide-scale electric defenses, while scientists race in central laboratories to decipher the enemy method and devise a countermeasure. The narrative alternates tense battlefield observation with frantic laboratory effort, exploring themes of technological escalation, scientific ingenuity under pressure, and the thin line between destructive discovery and defensive salvation.





