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Operation Thunder. Tales From The Darker Side, #3
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233129513
- EAN9798233129513
- Date de parution18/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
Operation Thunder - Tales from the Darker Side is a Black historical sci-fi thriller set primarily in 1943 Washington D. C. and New Orleans, following Joy Joseph, a twenty-one-year-old Howard University physics student whose father, the brilliant French-Haitian scientist Dr. Jerone Joseph, was secretly extracted from Nazi-occupied Europe and brought to Washington as a classified G-14 government contractor.
Jerone had discovered a catastrophic atmospheric weapon - code-named Operation Thunder - based on massive, living jellyfish-like entities that drift in the upper atmosphere and, when weaponized and released, descend on populated areas and consume all life within them, feeding on destruction with no ability to be recalled or contained. The weapon was tested without Jerone's consent on Folsom, Tennessee in July 1943, erasing a town of 2, 200 people, a massacre the government buried as an industrial accident.
When a Nazi cell infiltrates Howard University's campus - using two operatives from German South West Africa as cover - and attempts to kidnap Jerone to weaponize a rebuilt version of POP against the Port of New Orleans, Joy must use her father's secret containment sequence, which she has carried in memory since age fourteen, to stop the deployment and save the city that supplies Allied troops, vessels, and war materiel to the entire Southern theater.
She does not act alone - she operates through the Watchers, a multigenerational Black intelligence network rooted in Howard University, the Alpha Kappa Lambda Sigma sorority with secret OSS ties, and a web of community contacts running from Washington to New Orleans that the government has never been able to infiltrate, because it is built not on bureaucracy but on family. The novel's ultimate argument is that the most important history is the history the powerful need you to forget - and the most enduring intelligence operation in American history was never a government program, but the quiet, unbroken chain of Black women who watched, remembered, and refused to let the truth disappear. Operation Thunder is, at its core, a book about what happens when the darkness we try to outrun finally demands to be faced.
It asks what people do when their secrets, fears, and unfinished pain stop hiding in the background and start shaping every choice they make. For you as a reader, Operation Thunder isn't just "scary" or "dark" for its own sake. It's about the pressure building under ordinary lives-trauma, racism, power, faith, temptation, survival-and how that pressure turns into storms no one can control. The stories invite you to sit with the uncomfortable questions: Who do you become when you're pushed to the edge? What parts of you are you willing to sacrifice to feel safe, seen, or in control?The book is really about the thin line between victim and perpetrator, haunted and haunting, and how the past refuses to stay buried until someone is brave enough to name it.
It speaks to readers who know something about carrying their own "thunder" inside-a grief, a rage, a secret-and want to see that weight reflected honestly on the page.
Jerone had discovered a catastrophic atmospheric weapon - code-named Operation Thunder - based on massive, living jellyfish-like entities that drift in the upper atmosphere and, when weaponized and released, descend on populated areas and consume all life within them, feeding on destruction with no ability to be recalled or contained. The weapon was tested without Jerone's consent on Folsom, Tennessee in July 1943, erasing a town of 2, 200 people, a massacre the government buried as an industrial accident.
When a Nazi cell infiltrates Howard University's campus - using two operatives from German South West Africa as cover - and attempts to kidnap Jerone to weaponize a rebuilt version of POP against the Port of New Orleans, Joy must use her father's secret containment sequence, which she has carried in memory since age fourteen, to stop the deployment and save the city that supplies Allied troops, vessels, and war materiel to the entire Southern theater.
She does not act alone - she operates through the Watchers, a multigenerational Black intelligence network rooted in Howard University, the Alpha Kappa Lambda Sigma sorority with secret OSS ties, and a web of community contacts running from Washington to New Orleans that the government has never been able to infiltrate, because it is built not on bureaucracy but on family. The novel's ultimate argument is that the most important history is the history the powerful need you to forget - and the most enduring intelligence operation in American history was never a government program, but the quiet, unbroken chain of Black women who watched, remembered, and refused to let the truth disappear. Operation Thunder is, at its core, a book about what happens when the darkness we try to outrun finally demands to be faced.
It asks what people do when their secrets, fears, and unfinished pain stop hiding in the background and start shaping every choice they make. For you as a reader, Operation Thunder isn't just "scary" or "dark" for its own sake. It's about the pressure building under ordinary lives-trauma, racism, power, faith, temptation, survival-and how that pressure turns into storms no one can control. The stories invite you to sit with the uncomfortable questions: Who do you become when you're pushed to the edge? What parts of you are you willing to sacrifice to feel safe, seen, or in control?The book is really about the thin line between victim and perpetrator, haunted and haunting, and how the past refuses to stay buried until someone is brave enough to name it.
It speaks to readers who know something about carrying their own "thunder" inside-a grief, a rage, a secret-and want to see that weight reflected honestly on the page.



















