Contents
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The Invaders The Invaders
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The Enemy In Our Midst The Enemy In Our Midst
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The Riddle of the Sands The Riddle of the Sands
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A New Trafalgar A New Trafalgar
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The Invasion of 1910 The Invasion of 1910
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When the Eagle Flies Seaward When the Eagle Flies Seaward
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England Invaded 60,000 Germans Marching On the Midlands England Invaded 60,000 Germans Marching On the Midlands
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The Death Trap The Death Trap
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Great Naval Victory The French Desert Germany Arrival of Japanese Fleet Thousands of Japanese Officers Landed at Liverpool Great Naval Victory The French Desert Germany Arrival of Japanese Fleet Thousands of Japanese Officers Landed at Liverpool
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The Child's Guide to Knowledge The Child's Guide to Knowledge
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Two The Enemy Within and the Enemy beyond the Seas
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Published:January 1997
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Abstract
The first year of the twentieth century saw the emergence of the new myth of the coming war between Britain and Germany. Two stories, Die Abrechnung mit England and Wehrlos zur Se, predicted that the British would be the primary target in the future war. The Campaign of Douai (1899) describes the role of Germany in the Anglo-German war against Russia and France, while The New Battle of Dorking (1901) warns of the danger of a surprise raid by the French. London's Peril (1900) and Pro Patria (1901) detail a French plan to invade England using a secret tunnel under the Channel. In 1901, Louis Tracy returned to future-war fiction with an original contribution to the idea of ‘the enemy within’, but the most notorious of all the future-war stories is William Le Queux's The Invasion of 1910 (1906).
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