
Books


In 1942, at a secret German research facility, a radar signal appears that does not belong—and begins to produce changes no one can account for.
Echoes of the Reich is a World War II technothriller where science, intelligence, and institutional power converge around a single anomaly—one that behaves less like interference and more like intent.
At Peenemünde, on Germany’s Baltic coast, the Reich’s most advanced weapons research program operates under strict control. When radar engineer Wilhelm Brandt detects a structured irregularity in the returns, it is dismissed as error. It persists. It aligns. It begins to follow its own logic.
As scrutiny intensifies, Brandt turns to mathematician Klara Steinmann. Together, they move from observation to intervention—confronting a system that is no longer behaving as it should.
Across Europe, fragments of the same signal are intercepted. At Bletchley Park, it resists interpretation. British and Soviet intelligence move in parallel to understand it—and to control it. A covert team is sent to the Baltic coast to locate its source, knowing that what they find may already be beyond containment.
Within the Reich, rival authorities compete for control of the anomaly, advancing it as a strategic asset before its purpose is understood.
A century later, a research institute uncovers evidence that 1942 did not unfold as recorded—and that the consequences are accelerating.
Grounded in historical detail and driven by procedural realism, Echoes of the Reich explores how systems of power absorb uncertainty, enforce outcomes, and reshape reality without recognition.
Early readers describe the novel as “remarkably immersive,” noting how it draws them into each scene and sustains tension through to the end.
For readers drawn to the narrative precision of Robert Harris, the systems-driven detail of Michael Crichton and Andy Weir, the operational realism of Frederick Forsyth, and the pace and historical sweep of Jack Higgins and Ken Follett, Echoes of the Reich is a story where the past is not rewritten—it is recalibrated.
Echoes of the Reich
A Historical Techno-Thriller
Available Now
Contact
Reach out for inquiries or updates
© 2026 J.D. Arron. All rights reserved.
Subscribe
Occasional updates. No spam.