User:Jengod/BookDraft
{{short description|Speculative fiction first published 1940}}
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| name = Lighting in the Night
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| author = Fred Allhoff
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| genre = Speculative fiction
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| publisher = Prentice-Hall
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| published = 1940, 1979
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Lightning in the Night is a speculative fiction story about Nazi Germany invading the United States. First published in 13 installments in 1940, the story was a magazine commission written by Fred Allhoff and published serially in the general interest magazine Liberty. The series was collected and republished in book form in 1979.
History
Lightning in the Night is described as a "sensational serial" about "Hitler's invasion of the United States".{{Cite magazine |last=Moskowitz |first=Sam |date=March 1994 |title=What Is Past |magazine=NIEKAS Science Fiction and Fantasy |page=26 |issue=44}} The work was commissioned, and came about, while Liberty magazine was "sponsoring a national contest for the official Air Force song".{{sfnp|Franklin|1988|page=138}} Cultural historian H. Bruce Franklin commented on Lightning in the Night in his 1988 book War Stars: The Superweapon and the American Imagination, noting that Liberty boasted that Allhoff had consulted with experts like Robert Lee Bullard, Yates Stirling Jr., and George Sokolsky on the piece, which almost entirely anticipated the then-forthcoming global air war of World War II, and attempt to beat the Nazis to the atomic bomb with the Manhattan Project, "Thus the millions of readers of Liberty in 1940 were confronted with a picture of the future that lies in wait for them if the United States does not build a separate air force capable of strategic bombardment and does not win a nuclear arms race with the Nazis. One wonders whether this effort to build popular support for financing the atomic weapons research that was already under way might have had some tacit semiofficial sponsorship."{{sfnp|Franklin|1988|page=139}} Lightning in the Night was republished in book form in 1979.{{Cite news |date=1979-03-25 |title=BOOKS: What if Adolf Hitler had defeated the British? |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-morning-news-books-what-if-adolf-hi/149813337/ |access-date=2024-06-22 |work=The Morning News |pages=102}}
Reception
One 1979 reviewer said the magazine series "helped psychologically swing America away from a decade of pacifism that had unintentionally aided Hitler's war machine" but found the "flat characters, relentless plot and contrived denouement" tiresome.{{Cite news |date=1979-04-27 |title=Book envisioning Nazi invasion of U.S. provides 1940s nostalgia |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-tampa-times-book-envisioning-nazi-in/149938781/ |access-date=2024-06-24 |work=The Tampa Times |pages=45}}
References
{{reflist}}
= Sources =
- {{Cite book |last=Franklin |first=H. Bruce |year=1988 |author-link=H. Bruce Franklin |chapter=Don't worry it's only science fiction |title=War Stars: The Superweapon and the American Imagination |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-505295-4 |location=New York |lccn=87034734 |oclc=276803031}}
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