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Matthew Moss

    This author discovered her passion for writing in high school when assigned a poem for class. For several years, she channeled this into crafting dark-themed poetry before transitioning to fiction at 19. The challenge and excitement of creating worlds of her own design then inspired her first book, delving into vast and immersive narratives.

    After the Last Battle
    The Sterling Submachine Gun
    The PIAT
    • The PIAT

      • 80 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Designed in 1942, Britain's innovative Projector, Infantry, Anti-Tank (PIAT) provided British and Commonwealth troops with a much-needed means of taking on Germany's formidable Panzers. Replacing the inadequate Boys anti-tank rifle, it was conceived in the top-secret World War II research and development organization known colloquially as 'Churchill's Toyshop', alongside other ingenious weapons such as the sticky bomb, the limpet mine and the time-pencil fuse. Unlike the more famous US bazooka, the PIAT had its roots in something simpler than rocket science. Operated from the shoulder, the PIAT was a spigot mortar which fired a heavy high-explosive bomb, with its main spring soaking up the recoil. The PIAT had a limited effective range. Troops required nerves of steel to get close enough to an enemy tank to ensure a direct hit, often approaching to within 50ft of the target, and no fewer than six Victoria Crosses were won during World War II by soldiers operating PIATs. A front-line weapon in every theatre of the conflict in which Commonwealth troops fought, from Europe to the Far East, the PIAT remained in service after 1945, seeing action during the Greek Civil War, the Arab-Israeli conflict and the Korean War. This illustrated study combines detailed research with expert analysis to reveal the full story of the design, development and deployment of this revolutionary weapon

      The PIAT
    • The Sterling Submachine Gun

      • 80 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      This fully illustrated study explores the colorful history of the Sterling, the accurate and reliable submachine gun that equipped British and other forces in a host of conflicts across the globe during the Cold War era.

      The Sterling Submachine Gun
    • An assassination broke the peace, causing Heaven and Hell to enter another war, but this one was different; Heaven lost this war. With the angels nearly extinct, the demonic forces of Hell are free to occupy the three realms: Heaven, Hell, and Earth. However, the one reason for the assassination, which led to a war that left the world scarred, just might be the thing that gives Earth a second chance.

      After the Last Battle