1632

Mass Market Paperback, 597 pages

English language

Published June 30, 2006 by Baen Books.

ISBN:
978-1-4165-3281-1
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OCLC Number:
74268147

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4 stars (18 reviews)

A small West Virginia town is permanently transplanted to 1632 Germany, in the middle of the 30-years war.

4 editions

Review of '1632' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

4.25 Hard to rate this one. One the one hand, it's just my kind of setting, a little American mountain town flung into the Thirty Years' War, on the other hand the focus shifts constantly from the brutally military to the romantic love at first sight (never my favourite trope). It also seems to lack the psychological realism that deals with both cultural displacement (on both sides) and the horrors of war (for most characters that is).

But it is obvious that this book is a labour of love and even if it's sometimes painfully different from the America of today, the belief int the decent, ingenius, welcoming America is something that can be a balm. It's clear from reading that the author was involved in the labour movement and maybe that makes such a different from all the vainglorious military novels (be they SF or fantasy) that so often …

Review of '1632' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

A tough read. I really liked the idea behind the book, but actually reading it was not very entertaining. I don't mind that the book does not subscribe to a grimdark POV, but instead has the heroes win it all. It's just that I find the Americans to be very annoying. And overall I guess I wouldn't mind some darker events. All in all an OK book, but not more.

Review of '1632' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Great concept and generally a well written book.

Now for some downsides. I understand the need to deliver information to the reader about the time period, but for most times that happened in this book I felt I was reading a history textbook and it really detracted from the novel as a whole. I also disliked the cliche of everyone finding their "soulmate". Every major character seemed to fall in love at first sight with someone else in the novel. Ugh. But, I like time travel novels so I have a soft spot for them when I pick one up to read.

Review of '1632' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

First Read (May 2011): "1632" by Eric Flint is a book motivated by an interesting idea and executed inconsistently. Taking a classic alternate history trope the first book of the "Ring of Fire" project (see below) sets up an ambitious premise with characters that can't help but charm the reader and keep them engaged through even the roughest patches.

The premise is simple as it is intriguing: the entire town of Grantville, West Virginia find themselves transported from 2001 America to 1632 Central Germany at the height of the Thirty Years' War. Far from being melancholy or extremely silly as the genre tends to go between, "1632" is more of a "positive" alternate history which casts the entire town as a "collective protagonist" whose presence in the timeline will have negative but also real, positive effects. I do not wish to give too much away about the plot or characters …

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Subjects

  • Science Fiction - Space Opera
  • Science Fiction - Adventure
  • Fiction
  • Fiction - Science Fiction
  • Science Fiction
  • Science Fiction - Alternative History
  • Science Fiction - General