Final blackout
FINAL BLACKOUT

By L. RON HUBBARD

HADLEY PUBLISHING CO. PROVIDENCE, R.I.

COPYRIGHT BY STREET & SMITH PUBLICATIONS 1940 COPYRIGHT 1948 BY L. RON HUBBARD

HALLADAY INC. EAST PROVIDENCE 14, R.I.

DEDICATION

To the Men and Officers with Whom I Served in World War II, First Phase, 1941-1945.

To the Men and Officers with Whom I Served in World War II, First Phase, 1941-1945.

PREFACE

When FINAL BLACKOUT was written there was still a Maginot Line, Dunkirk was just another French coastal town and the Battle of Britain, the Bulge, Saipan, Iwo, V2s and Nagasaki were things unknown and far ahead in history. While it concerns these things, its action will not take place for many years yet to come and it is, therefore, still a story of the future though some of the "future" it embraced (about one fifth) has already transpired.

When published in magazine form before the war it created a little skirmish of its own and, I am told, as time has gone by and some of it has unreeled, interest in it has if anything increased. So far its career has been most adventurous as a story. The "battle of FINAL BLACKOUT" has included loud wails from the Communists—who said it was pro-fascist (while at least one fascist has held it to be pro-Communist). Its premises have been called wild and unfounded on the one hand while poems (some of them very good) have been written about or dedicated to the Lieutenant. Meetings have been held to nominate it to greatness while others have been called to hang the author in effigy (and it is a matter of record that the last at least was successfully accomplished).

The British would not hear of its being published there at the time it appeared in America, though Boston, I am told, remained neutral—for there is nothing but innocent slaughter in it and no sign of rape.

There are those who insist that it is all very bad and those who claim for it the status of immortality. And while it probably is not the worst tale ever 
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