
ISBN: 978-1-78830-166-4
Published: 28/06/2018
Summary
Who would believe that international terrorists had targeted a pensioner living in Haslemere, inserting a microchip into the back of her head and cameras into her eyes, in order to attempt to manipulate her for their own purposes? That the terrorists were able to make money by focusing their attacks on elderly people living in nursing homes, with their need for costly knee and hip-replacement operations? Or that this pensioner had then learnt how to fight the terrorists, using telepathy, and that she had then been responsible for killing more than eight thousand of them, thus making a centrally important contribution to national security? In this incredible book, Martha Twine provides detailed and documented evidence for these extraordinary claims and more. By the time you have finished reading Terror in Britain, you may find yourself convinced, or, alternatively, still sceptical - but you will most certainly have been disturbed.
Extract
“I was in the garden weeding, and I happened to look up for a moment at a point in the sky, at about forty-five degrees to the vertical. It was as if that point had become a shiny dot, and then five glorious white birds burst from it in a star formation. They were a bit like giant seagulls, nearly as large as albatrosses. They were partly pure glistening white and partly off-white. The off-white part looked mat like soft fleece. I did not see feathers, but the birds glowed in the light, and had a proud demeanour.
The birds were clearly not real. They were some kind of manufactured, remote-controlled creation. They set about finding all the camera birds in the garden. They had swing-wing capability, and they dived into hedges and tree canopies. And here’s the really amazing thing: they did not kill the camera birds, but cancelled the WIFI transmitters in their bodies, so that the birds were freed from captivity.
‘Let’s hear it for our military!’ I thought. They were showing that they knew about the illicit technologies used to enslave birds, and had technologies of their own, far in advance of anything the terrorists could dream of.”

The Network
This is a dark book. It’s raw and hardcore. It is not for everyone, but it records Martha’s extraordinary experiences as a target of illegal directed energy weapons initiated by a hostile state. (It is not until 2022, four years after this book was published, that Martha realises that the hostile state is Russia.) What these weapons can do takes us into the realm of science fiction, happening now on planet Earth. Martha discovers that ultrasound, used by paramilitary militias as their covert operating environment, turns her from a victim into a powerful force, able to retaliate against the covert forces intent on destroying Western civilisation.
Martha is plunged into an underground culture where law enforcement does not exist, and every form of criminality is free to operate without restraint. When Martha watches these subhumans torturing an old man for their own amusement, a surge of anger goes through her, and the next thing she knows is that the man in charge of this living hell is gone, and the ground where he stood had burned white by the laser force that came out of her. After that Martha knows what she had to do, and she goes after those responsible for the terror wherever she can find them. Martha’s mission takes her to many countries, including France, Seychelles, Algeria, Mali, North Korea, Canada and to a man-made parallel earth accessed via the Indian Ocean, as the web of evil begins to unravel.
Further reading
A great deal of research has been undertaken on the themes covered in the books, uncovering a world where the fiction gives way to contemporary science. You can delve deeper by visiting the supplementary sections of this website.
Reader reviews
The author portrays a technocratic view of the world hinted at by writers such as Huxley, Ayn Rand but of course with our modern perspective.

Benjamin Donnelly
This is a book that will challenge the reader. If it's read with an open mind, you will be surprised how deep it really goes. I have a feeling that the author has much more information to share with us than one single book has allowed.

J. F.