Invisible Death: Two Novelettes

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Two novelettes about madmen who want to conquer the world. The Beetle Horde was the cover story for the initial issue of Astounding Stories in January 1930. The Invisible Death was the cover story for Astounding Stories in the October 1930 issue. Both stories were about the revenge that spurned egotistical men will wreak upon the world when they don’t get their ways. Both stories reveal weak men in positions of advantage as the aspiring autocrats of their fantasies.

The Beetle Horde (1930)

Only two young explorers stand in the way of the mad Bram’s horrible revenge— the releasing of his trillions of man-sized beetles upon an utterly defenseless world.

Chapter I – Dodd’s Discovery

Chapter II – Beetles and Humans

Chapter III – Ten Miles Underground

Chapter IV – Bram’s Story

Chapter V – Doomed!

Chapter VI – Escape!

Conclusion

Bullets, shrapnel, shell—nothing can stop the trillions of famished, man-sized beetles which, led by a madman, sweep down over the human race.

Chapter VII – Through the Inferno

Chapter VIII – Recaptured

Chapter IX – The Trail of Death

Chapter X – At Bay

Chapter XI – The World Set Free

The Invisible Death (1930)

With night-rays and darkness-antidote America strikes back at the terrific and destructive Invisible Empire.

Chapter I – Out of the Hangman’s Hands

Chapter II – Conference

Chapter III – In the White House

Chapter IV – The Invisible Ambassador

Chapter V – The Enemy Strikes

Chapter VI – The Gas

Chapter VII – On the Trail

Chapter VIII – The Magnetic Trap

Chapter IX – The Invisible Emperor

Chapter X – The Tricks of the Trade

Chapter XI – In the Laboratory

Chapter XII – Von Kettler’s End

Chapter XIII – You Can’t Down the Marines

Invisible Death has 3 illustrations.

Par autoru

Victor Rousseau Emanuel (1879-1960), was originally born as Avigdor Rousseau Emanuel in England. He died in 1960 in Tarryton, New York. He wrote predominantly under the pen names Victor Rousseau, H. M. Egbert, and V. R. Emanuel, but, in the 1930s, he abandoned these pseudonyms to establish Victor Rousseau as a recognizable name in pulp fiction magazines. He wrote “spicy” stories under the pen name Lew Merrill.

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