The West Virginia town of Grantville, torn from the twentieth century and hurled back into seventeenth century Europe has allied with Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, in the United States of Europe. So, when Gustavus invades Poland, managing to unite all the squabbling Polish factions into repelling the common enemy, the time-lost Americans have to worry about getting dragged into the fight along with the Swedish forces.

But Mike Stearns has another problem. He was Prime Minister of the USE until he lost an election, and now he’s one of Gustavus’s generals; and he has demonstrated that he’s very good at being a general. And he’s about to really need all his military aptitude. Gretchen , who never saw a revolution she didn’t like, has been arrested in Saxony, and is likely to be executed. The revolutionary groups which she has been working with are not about to let that happen, and suddenly there’s rioting in the streets. Saxony’s ruthless General Baner is determined to suppress the uprising by the time-honored “kill them all and let God sort them out” method, which only adds fuel to the fire. So Gustavus orders Mike Stearns to go to Saxony and restore order. But he makes one mistake.

He didn’t tell Mike to take his troops along on the mission. But he didn’t tell him not to, either . . .

About the Author

Eric Flint is the author of the New York Times best sellers 1634: The Galileo Affair (with Andrew Dennis), 1634: The Baltic War and 1634: The Bavarian Crisis—all novels in his top-selling “Ring of Fire” alternate history series. His first novel for Baen, Mother of Demons, was picked by Science Fiction Chronicle as a best novel of the year. His 1632, which launched the ring of Fire series, won widespread critical praise, as from Publishers Weekly, which called him “an SF author of particular note, one who can entertain and edify in equal, and major, measure.” A longtime labor union activist with a Master’s Degree in history, he currently resides in northwest Indiana with his wife Lucille.

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  1. Product Review
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    80%
    Good 1632 fun. There's a lot to love here, with all your favorites and some new(er) characters all thrown into the usual chaos, and some good hints about what's coming next.

    As the series has gone on it's shifted to emphasize the characters as the prime movers above the anachronistic technological (physical and ideological) aspects. That's reasonable on a lot of levels, perhaps even necessary, but it does lose a bit of the cleverness of the first books and bring us back to more the level of straight alt-historical fiction than "transplanted-in-time".

    I can't help but feel this book is padded somewhat - there are whole subplots here which are borderline filler. There's also a whole lot of deliberate stand-around-doing-nothing amidst the loony reactionaries. Yes, this is a major theme (and dare I say a clever layer of contemporary political allegory?) but it's so endemic that we're reaching David Weber levels of talking-head syndrome. I could pretty easily argue that there are precisely two meaningful chapters in this book. This is, I suspect, a consequence of splitting one book into two... but my comments on that are in the review of the last book.

    Don't get me wrong - I enjoyed this very much, the payoff is worth the read, and I want to read more 1632 novels in the future. If you've liked the previous main-line novels, you'll like this one. A solid sequel, if not precisely the one I wanted to see.

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  2. Product Review
    Quality
    100%
    Great! Can't wait to see the full novel!

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  3. Product Review
    Quality
    100%
    read the sampler now cant wait to get the rest online .Its left me hanging!

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