



The Thunders of Silence
Publisher Description
Some people said Congressman Mallard had gone mad. These were his friends, striving out of the goodness of their hearts to put the best face on what at best was a lamentable situation. Some said he was a traitor to his country. These were his enemies personal political and journalistic. Some called him a patriot who put humanity above nationality a new John the Baptist come out of the wilderness to preach a sobering doctrine of world-peace to a world made drunk on war. And these were his followers. Of the first his friends there were not many left. Of the second group there were millions that multiplied themselves. Of the third there had been at the outset but a timorous and furtive few, and they mostly men and women who spoke English if they spoke it at all, with the halting speech and the twisted idiom that betrayed their foreign birth being persons who found it entirely consistent to applaud the preachment of planetic disarmament out of one side of their mouths.