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Marching Through Georgia
  

Marching Through Georgia (Paperback)

by S. M. Stirling (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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2 new from CDN$ 98.48 5 used from CDN$ 24.95 1 collectible from CDN$ 78.10

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4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Unreadable, but not in a BAD way..., Jul 12 2004
By Robert P. Beveridge "xterminal" (Cleveland, OH) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
S. M. Stirling, Marching Through Georgia (Baen, 1988)

I'm not going to call marching Through Georgia a bad novel. I got a lot farther through it than the usual fifty-page rule. My only real problem with it was, quite simply, it didn't hold my interest.

This could very well be because I have trouble slogging through war novels of most stripes (Harry Turtledove's Guns of the South had much the same effect on me, despite its classic status). The book was originally recommended to me for its depictions of the society of the Draka, but I found it so difficult to get through I simply couldn't appreciate them.

So I'm not saying it's bad, I just couldn't get though it. You may have a different experience. Gets the gentleman's C.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Master Race Meets the Master Class, Dec 29 2003
By Arthur W. Jordin (Smyrna, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Marching Through Georgia is the first novel in the Draka series. In another timeline, the losers from wars in America and Europe, philosophers without followers, and other misfits migrated to the Draka Crown Colony in South Africa. Over decades the colony took over the entirety of sub-Sahara Africa and then the Balkans, becaming the sovereign Domination of Draka in 1919.

During World War II, the Domination entered the war with an airdrop onto Sicily in 1941. Six months later, the Germans had taken Moscow and the Wehrmacht in south Georgia are threatening the Draka conquests in Armenia. The Draka are assembling armored legions in Armenia to attack through the Caucasus Mountains and drop two legions of airborne at night to clear the passes of the Ossetian Military Highway. Opposing them is a panzer regiment of the Waffen-SS, Liebstandarte Adolf Hitler.

In this novel, the von Shrakenberg family are descendents of a Hessian mercenary paid off with land in southern Africa after the British lost their war against the American rebels. Karl is an Arch-Strategos, a general of the Supreme General Staff. His son Eric is Centurion of Century A, 1st Airborne Legion. His daughter Johanna is a Pilot Officer flying Eagle interceptors.

Karl is back in Castle Tarleton overlooking Archona, the capital of Draka. He is worried about Eric leading his century in the Caucasus Mountains and Johanna flying an Eagle out of Kars. He knows the North Caucasus campaign is risky, but necessary for the Domination to grow.

Century A has an American reporter, Bill Dreiser, with them as they drop into the mountains. It is his first airdrop and he is understandably nervous. As he leaps from the plane and falls, he grasps the release toggle and gives a single firm jerk.

This novel shows the personal lives of the van Shrakenberg family after the Sicily campaign in their plantation Oakenwald, intermingled with the assault on Village One along the Ossetian Military Highway. It describes the history of the Domination and the people who become the Draka. It also tells something of their serfs and their enemies.

The assault on Village One is depicted in great detail, from the first sentry taken out by the advancing Draka to the final confrontation and the subsequent relief by the Janissaries. It is a tale of a trained, experienced and well-led combat unit with excellent morale and determination. Unfortunately, they happen to be slave-holding imperialists.

This story is plausible and frightening in concept. What if the British had encouraged loyalists from the former American colonies to settle in South Africa? What if those settlers had been imperialistic and had expanded into Rhodesia a century before Cecil Rhodes? What if they continued their expansion to the rest of sub-Saharan Africa and then to the Ottomon Empire? Would the resulting state have a social structure combining the worst features of the Confederacy and the Afrikaners, but with a government more militarized and efficient than the Spartans or Prussians? Welcome to the Domination.

...The slave trade itself was banned in 1834 and this ban was enforced by British warships. However, the British hold in Africa was very lose prior to the 1880's and the taking of slaves within the African continent was not ended until 1891. Even after the Boer War, a form of non-chattel slavery remained in the practice of apartheid.

Highly recommended for Stirling fans and for anyone else who enjoys alternate history depicting ground combat in the worst of all possible worlds.

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