retirez en magasin sous 2h
magasin dès le lendemain
4 fois sans frais par carte bancaire
sous 30 jours
Dernières recherches
ebook
Le saviez vous ?
Lisez votre e-book sur ordinateur, tablette et mobile grâce aux applications :
Coups de cœur Cultura
Tous les passeurs de culture peuvent partager leurs découvertes !
Tu as aimé ce produit ? Partage dès maintenant ton coup de coeur :
MID-CENTURY SCI-FI SHORT READ. Near the end of the 1950s, an impressive, highly coordinated Army training exercise goes off without a hitch. Until frightened townsfolk, mistaking experimental Army communication helmets for alien antennae, launch an improvised defense. Based on a true story. From PEOPLE MAKING DANGER (Vol. 1), a multi-genre collection of fun three-act stories.
"Operation Dragonhead by Adam Fike is a wildly inventive, satirical tale that blurs the line between Cold War paranoia, small-town Americana, and comic-book absurdity. Based on a real-life Army exercise in the 1950s, the story reimagines the chaos through the eyes of farmers, townsfolk, and overzealous generals who mistake, or encourage others to mistake, routine maneuvers for a full-blown alien invasion. What unfolds is a sharp, humorous critique of fear, authority, and the fragile trust between citizens and institutions.
What I loved most about this story is its tonal balance. Author Adam Fike layers sharp political commentary beneath a playful, almost cinematic surface. The exaggerated characters, the blustering General Hammertree, the wide-eyed townsfolk, the opportunistic local elites feel like archetypes, yet they capture something essential about human behavior in times of confusion. The dialogue brims with wit, and the pacing keeps the reader engaged, moving seamlessly between tense military briefings and farcical encounters with "aliens."
Overall, Operation Dragonhead is more than a quirky historical fiction piece, it's a mirror held up to both the absurdity and the danger of orchestrated fear. Readers who enjoy a mix of satire, history, and speculative playfulness will find this story as thought-provoking as it is entertaining."
- The Reading Bud