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1632 (NOVEL)


Main articles: 1632 series, The Grantville Gazettes

'''1632''' is the initial novel in the best selling alternate history genre 1632 book series set in the Holy Roman Empire by historian, writer and editor Eric Flint. The flagship novel kicked off a remarkable collaborative writing effort that has involved hundreds of contributors, dozens of authors, and has published works now numbered well into the double digits—and if anything—is adding new titles at an increasingly fast pace (see: the two main articles). The premise involves a small American town of three thousand 'Hillbillies' sent back to April 1631, during the Thirty Years' War.

Contents
Plot summary
Characters in "1632"
Historical figures in the book
Characters of more than minor note
Release details
External links

Plot summary


The fictional town of Grantville, WV (modeled on the real town of Mannington, West Virginia) and its power plant are displaced in space-time, through a side effect (an accident, in truth) of an alien technology (The Assiti Shards).
A hemispherical section of land about three miles in radius measured from the town center is transported back in time from April of 2000 (our time line 'OTL') into the middle of the Thirty Years' War, in the German province of Thuringia in the Thuringer Wald in May of 1631, near the fictional German free city of Badenburg. This Assiti event occurs during a wedding reception, accounting for the presence of a few characters not native to the town, including an extra doctor and his daughter, a nurse. Real Thuringian municipalities located close to Grantville are posited as Weimar, Jena, Saalfeld and the more remote Erfurt, Arnstadt, and Eisenach; all located in the valley of the Saale River East of the Palatinate (Rhine) well to the south of Halle and Leipzig.
Grantville, led by Mike Stearns, president of the local United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), and a supporting cast of characters widely diverse in background and viewpoint cope with the town's space-time dislocation, the surrounding raging war, language barriers, and numerous social and political issues, including class conflict, witchcraft, feminism, the reformation and the counter-reformation, among many other factors. One complication is a compounding of the town's food shortage when the town is flooded by refugees from the war. Flint also addresses the culture shock experienced by the 1631 locals exposed to the mores of contemporary society, including modern dress, sexual liberation, and boisterous American-style politics.
Europe of the times

Map of the Holy Roman Empire (Germany) divisions (c. 1512)

Map of today's Germany (compare with Holy Roman Empire map above) where the green shows Thuringia

In a more practical vein, the plot covers short-term survival of the town, as well as the long-term question of how to maintain technology sundered from twenty-first century resources. Throughout 1631, Grantville manages to establish itself locally forming the nascent United States of Europe (USE) with several local free cities (and a couple which aren't) while the war-clouds dog the northern German plain. But once Count Tilly falls during the Battle of Breitenfeld outside of Leipzig, King Gustavus Adolphus rapidly moves the war theater to Grantville's south into Franconia and Bavaria, both of which are on Grantville's doorstep. The events of '1632' thereafter qualify as ''interesting times'' leading up to the creation of an awkward Confederated Principalities of Europe (CPoE) and some measure of security for Grantville's ''up-timer'' and ''down-timer'' populations.

Characters in "1632"


Historical figures in the book

Several historical figures occupy prominent or supporting roles in the novel include King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, Count Tilly, and Albrecht von Wallenstein, all general officers of note and fame, Cardinal Richelieu, takes on the role of the ultimate villain forced by circumstance in the later third of the work.
Characters of more than minor note

To the historical personalities, Flint adds fictional characters of local origin (''down-timers'') including some with a real historical basis like the various members of the Abrabanel family (composite characters), or the holder of this or that office. He then creates action by introducing ''up-time'' Americans (i.e. those caught by the Ring of Fire from the future) in conversations large and small:

★ Balthazar Abrabanel – Jewish Doctor, Spy, Financier to Kings

Release details



★ 2000, USA, Pocket Books (ISBN 0-671-57849-9), Pub date ? February 2000, hardcover (First edition)

★ 2001, USA, Baen Books (ISBN 0-671-31972-8), ? February 2001, paperback

★ 2001, ?, Rebound by Sagebrush (ISBN 0-613-36671-9), ? October 2001, hardback (Library binding)

★ 2006, USA, Baen Books (ISBN 1-4165-3281-1), 30 June 2006, paperback

★ The full text of the novel is available from the Baen Free Library as an e-book: February 2000, DOI:0671578499
For publishing data on all books in the series, see 1632 series.

External links



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