
From the Treaty of Versailles to the first bombs falling on Warsaw—the countdown to catastrophe, told through the forms that filed it into existence. “This is not peace. This is an armistice for twenty years.” A German diplomat spoke those words in 1919. He was wrong by only thirty-seven days.
THE DOOMSDAY TIMETABLE is a sweeping work of historical fiction that traces the path from the humiliations of Versailles to the morning Neville Chamberlain told Britain it was at war. But this is not a story of great men making great decisions. It is the story of how civilization can be dismantled—not by barbarians at the gates, but by mild-mannered men in well-pressed suits checking the appropriate boxes.
What readers will discover:
The human machinery behind the historical record—what Chamberlain’s stomach felt like at 3 AM, knowing his life’s work had failed
The bureaucratic horror of forms that process atrocity with the same efficiency as leave applications
Civilians caught in the gears: a Tunbridge Wells mother knitting socks for a son marching toward Belgium, a Prague policeman saluting the occupiers of his own country, a small girl placing flowers on the rubble of her family’s home
The moral complexity of appeasement—eighteen months purchased at Munich, eighteen months of Spitfire production and radar installation, eighteen months that may have saved or doomed millions
A different kind of World War II novel. No simple villains. No comfortable verdicts. The Treaty of Versailles ran to 440 pages—nations have been birthed with fewer words, empires have fallen with less administrative thoroughness. The Doomsday Timetable asks how ordinary people perform their assigned functions with a competence that proves profoundly, tragically inappropriate. From the signing at Versailles to the resignation at Downing Street, the circle closes where it began: with signatures on paper, transforming human catastrophe into administrative record. The ledger remains open. History continues the accounting. Perfect for readers who loved The Splendid and the Vile, Munich by Robert Harris, All the Light We Cannot See, and The Winds of War. $0.99 on Kindle.

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