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1632
 
 

1632 (Hardcover)

by Eric Flint (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (132 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 35.50 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Product Details


Product Description

From Library Journal

When a cosmic accident transports a West Virginia community back in time and space to 17th-century Thuringia, the citizens of Grantville find themselves thrust into the midst of the bloody and savage conflict that history books would call the Thirty Years War. Surrounded by warring armies and burdened by the prospect of diminishing resources, Grantville residents, under the leadership of a council that includes a union leader, a doctor, and a teacher, proceed to turn their new world upside down, beginning the American Revolution a century and a half before its time. Flint (Mother of Demons) convincingly re-creates the military and political tenor of the times in this imaginative and unabashedly positive approach to alternative history. A solid choice for fantasy collections.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

In Flint's novel of time travel and alternate history, a six-mile square of West Virginia is tossed back in time and space to Germany in 1632, at the height of the barbaric and devastating Thirty Years' War. Repelling marauding mercenaries and housing German refugees are only the first of many problems the citizens of the tiny new U.S. face, problems including determining who shall be a citizen. In between action scenes and descriptions of technological military hardware, Flint handles that problem and other serious ethical questions seriously and offers a double handful of memorable characters: a Sephardic Jewish family that establishes commercial and marital ties with the Americans, a cheerleader captain turned lethal master sniper, a schoolteacher and an African American doctor who provide indispensable common sense and skill, a German refugee who is her family's sole protector, and, not least, King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. Not, perhaps, as elegant as some time-traveling alternate histories, Flint's is an intelligent page-turner nevertheless. Roland Green

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Customer Reviews

132 Reviews
5 star:
 (68)
4 star:
 (28)
3 star:
 (18)
2 star:
 (12)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (132 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
3.0 out of 5 stars Very entertaining, but full of anachronisms., Sep 22 2007
By Daniel Arseneault (Quebec City) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: 1632 (Paperback)
The scenario is great, and so much could have been done with it, but during the whole story I just kept telling myself: "Give me a break, that's not how things would have happened in the 17th century." A simple example: it just so happens that 17th century characters who speak English use the same vocabulary as 21st century Americans. Nevertheless, this book is a page turner, but definitely not a literary gem.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Stereotypes, Mar 5 2006
By A Customer
This review is from: 1632 (Paperback)
This book could have been a fascinating read, except for the stereotypes. The good guys are Protestants, unionized miners, and Jews. The bad guys are Catholics and corporate executives.

Flint uses the term 'Erse' instead of Gaelic. That term is heartily distliked in Scotland and Ireland for the same reason that 'nigger' is disliked in the U.S. The people who used the term ridiculed and denigrated Scottish Gaels (Highlanders).

Flint wrote 'Many of the soldiers in MacKay's cavalry unit could read–– and read well–– from their habit of studying the Bible. But the scout's thick Erse accent was the telltale sign of an illiterate Highlander.'

The name Alexander MacKay is a quintessential Highland name and it's possible there were men of that name in the real 'MacKey's' regiment. Most people in that regiment were Gaelic-speaking Highlanders, more likely to be literate in 1632 than a German or an Englishman. The Act of 1616 which 'abolished and removed' Gaelic as a cause of civility and barbarity in the Highlands and Islands had not taken effect. The Gaelic intelligentsia was still intact.

Flint's Scottish dialects are dreadful - Highland or Lowland –– and hard to read. Mr. Flint should visit Scotland or read some books written by Scots before writing another book.

I was prepared to like this book, but can't because of the underlying premises. I think this book was inspired partly by the 'Lion in the North' by G.A.Henty; it is full of the same prejudices.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic Read!, Sep 17 2004
By S. Simonetti "fuzzyrainbow" (Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: 1632 (Paperback)
For a combination of action, adventure and fantasy, you could not do better than Eric Flint's "1632."

This action-packed adventure begins during the present year in the cafeteria of the small town of Grantville, West Virginia's High School. While the majority of the guests celebrate the wedding of two of the town's favorite residents, the parents of the groom cast a disapproving pall over the reception. Before any confrontation can take place, everyone is catapulted into a terrifying situation from which there is no escape.

A "Ring Of Fire" is what the residents of Grantville have named the sudden and frightening phenomenon. When a select group of friends venture out to investigate reports of fire, they discover that they "aren't in Kansas anymore." A wall of earth, cut as if by a sword, surrounds their town and area. After a brutal gun fight with several mercenaries and careful inspection of their surroundings, they realize they have traveled back in time to Thuringia, Germany, during the 30 Years War.

"1632" is an engaging story in how the modern meets the past, and how both must work together for the common good of all. Refugees hear of the "magic" town of Grantville, and flock there for safety. There are no quick solutions and no easy answers. The modern citizens of Grantville must work together with the citizens of the 1600's to prevent bloodthirsty mercenaries from destroying their homes and lives.

The characters are so well fleshed out and real, one could swear they lived and breathed. Eric Flint's characterization is phenomenal! The "modern" women and men find that they have much in common with the women and men of the Seventeenth Century. There are no shrinking violets in this novel! The women are tough, strong, while managing to remain believable as citizens of the Seventeenth Century. There are many engrossing subplots in this novel, but none had touched me so much as the relationship between the modern citizen and student, Jeff Higgins, and the refugee Gretchen Richter. Brutalized by mercenaries, she, along with the other women in a mercenaries' camp, are saved from a life of brutality and despair. To prevent Gretchen from being forced to return to prostitution to support her family, Jeff marries her. Chapters 18 to 31 alone are worth the price of the novel!

This is not so much a story of time travel and alternate history as it is a story of good triumphing over evil, of love triumphing over brutality and violence and of citizens from two very different worlds learning to work, live and laugh with each other in the face of one of the most brutal periods in history. For a can't-put-it-down, action packed, exhilarating good read, try "1632!"

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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book and Fantastic Series Opener
This is an extremely good book that is a lot of fun to read. Very hard to put down. The premise of a West Virginia town being sent back to the year 1632 in the middle of Germany... Read more
Published on Jul 10 2004 by Keith Palmgren

5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVED this book!!!!!
This is my best find of the year (so far at least).

A small West Virginia mining town has been transported to 1632 Germany in the middle of the 30 Year War. Read more

Published on Jul 7 2004 by Jeanne Tassotto

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good Science Fiction
Well, not so much science really. The deus es machina that pulls the characters into the past is weird, and from then on it reads as alternative history. Read more
Published on Jun 23 2004 by Jedidiah Palosaari

5.0 out of 5 stars Fun Alternate History
Eric Flint's "1632" begins with the small mining town of Grantville being ripped from modern-day West Virginia and dropped in the middle of Germany, in the year 1631. 'How? Read more
Published on Jun 8 2004 by David Schaich

4.0 out of 5 stars A fun, if not terribly believeable, romp
I'm a big fan of alternative history, so I was naturally drawn to this book (and the series as a whole) by all the attention it's received. Read more
Published on May 17 2004 by Andrew Byers

5.0 out of 5 stars A Brilliant and Continuing Accomplishment!
Especially for those of us who were getting a bit fed up with the alternate history branch of Science Fiction that has been so heavily trodden in recent years, Flint has wrought a... Read more
Published on Mar 29 2004 by Richard F. Grantges

5.0 out of 5 stars Best AH novel I Have Read--Slightly Better than the Sequel
First, I bought "1633" by Eric Flint & David Weber, based on my past experience with the Honor Harrington books and others by Weber, all of which were great fun... Read more
Published on Mar 18 2004 by watzizname

4.0 out of 5 stars Minor Flaws
Alternative history can be a treat, if you like the genre. If you like it here is an interesting and suspenseful novel - with two minor flaws in it. Read more
Published on Mar 8 2004 by Peter Werner

2.0 out of 5 stars Disapointing effort
Having read excellent examples of this genre (e.g. S.M Sterling's Ocean in the Sea of Time), I found this book to be very disappointing. Read more
Published on Dec 29 2003 by Donna A. Leahey

5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't stop turning the pages.
This book immediately pulled me in. I couldn't stop turning the pages. For light fiction, the characters were delightfully multi-dimmensional - I cared about what happened to... Read more
Published on Dec 19 2003 by Callie

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