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1635: The Eastern Front
by Eric Flint
Publisher: Baen Books

The Thirty Years War continues to ravage 17th century Europe, but a new force is gathering power and influence: the United States of Europe, a new nation led by Gustavus Adolphus, King of Sweden, and the West Virginians from the 20th century led by Mike Stearns who were hurled centuries into the past by a mysterious cosmic accident. While the old entrenched rulers and manipulators continue to plot against this new upstart nation, everyday life goes on in Grantville, even under the shadow of war, as this lost outpost of American freedom and justice must play David against a 17th century Goliath of oppressive feudalism.

Praise for the New York Times Best-Selling Series:

". . . gripping and expertly detailed . . . a treat for lovers of action-SF or alternate history . . . battle scenes depicted with power . . . distinguishes Flint as an SF author of particular note, one who can entertain and edify in equal, and major, measure."
Publishers Weekly (in a starred review)

"[This] alternate-history saga . . . is certainly a landmark in that subgenre. . . . A splendid example of character-centered alternate-history, this is a must read for its series' growing fandom."
Booklist (Starred Review)

". . . takes historic speculation to a new level in a tale that combines accurate historical research with bold leaps of the imagination. Fans of alternate history and military sf should enjoy this rousing tale of adventure and intrigue."
Library Journal

"This alternate history series is already one of the best around and each new entry appears better than the previous one, a seemingly impossible feat . . . terrific. . . ."
The Midwest Book Review

Published 10/1/2010
SKU: 1439133891
Ebook Price: $6.99 
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Included In
W201010 October 2010 Monthly Baen Bundle
W201010 October 2010 Monthly Baen Bundle
$15.00
W201112 December 2011 WebScription
W201112 December 2011 Monthly Baen Bundle
$18.00
   





Product Rating: (3.66)   # of Ratings: 38   (Only registered customers can rate)

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Showing comments 1-10 of 23 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
1. Peter on 11/1/2012, said:

After reading "The Bavarian Crisis", this was a welcome change. Good pace, good story, an interesting twist at the end (although the story seems half-finished, and as with all the books, it is difficult to find out which part to read next).
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2. Bradley on 3/15/2012, said:

Another novel cut in half so Baen can milk it. Buy "1636: The Saxon Uprising" and read them back-to-back and you'll get the original novel, which deserves 5 stars. The action is good, the military strategy questionable, and we're left hanging as the book ends halfway through. Since it's a "main-line" novel written by Eric Flint, buy it. The books by other authors in this series are hit or miss, with very little military action and WAY too much character development and dialog.
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3. Bill on 1/22/2012, said:

The story continues to move along well. To answer another reviewer, I think there have been several stories in the Grantville Gazettes that deal with the 'East". My only complaint is the horrible formatting in the Cast of Characters in any version (HTML, Kindle, RTF).
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4. Wojciech on 12/13/2011, said:

Now it is now no suprise that East Europe was discovered in 16xx series only in 7th (or so) book, when from begining it was bordering USE. It was simply annoying that for 3 years east of USE existed a big black hole .. now after reading this book I can understand why and I can only recommend it to people who are ignorant about history.
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5. t on 7/2/2011, said:

Just started the book, so my rating is only for the formatting of the Mobi/Kindle version. In that version (as opposed to the HTML version), paragraphs are not indented, nor is there additional leading/line spacing between paragraphs. This makes it harder to read. If the Kindle version looked like the HTML version, it would be much easier to read. I really like getting Webscriptions books, but please pay a little more care to the typography.
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6. Robert on 5/8/2011, said:

This is an excellent book, and I am buying the sequel right now. I agree with many of the other commentors that it is half of a story, and that is a shame: by making it a cliff-hanger, it also makes it an incomplete book. OK, so it's a cliff-hanger. I'm still buying the next installment. (I think that's why they write them that way....) It doesn't look like there were many "Great" ratings for this book, apparently because people were ticked off by it stopping in the middle of the story as it does. There is a lot of justice in that: the book is incomplete as it stands. But it's still good and engaging and it moves the overall story of the Ring of Fire forward in very unexpected ways. I like it.
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7. Daniel on 4/15/2011, said:

Get this and The Saxon Uprising at the same time, and read them without pausing in between. Together, they make an excellent book.
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8. Clyde on 3/25/2011, said:

The story of the United States of Europe continues. There are some very good parts to this book, but I think the story is just getting too loose. It suffers from the same problem as 1634: The Baltic War. That is, Flint tries to do too much. 1632 and 1633 were great. 1634: The Galileo Affair and 1635: The Canon Law were quite good. I am afraid the other books in the series, including this one, suffer by comparison.
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9. Karl W on 1/6/2011, said:

This is not a complete book, it is, as others have noted, half a book. Do not buy it, get a copy from the library and read it. If you love this series as I do you will want to read it. The other half will be released in April, and there is always the hope that 'The Saxon Uprising' will be a full book. Eric Flint is an excellent writer, but this continuing trend of offering incomplete stories is wrong. I give special praise to Eric on his writing this (half) book alone instead of ruining it by using his former co-author, and I do not mean David Drake or David Weber. This potion of the story is like a breath of fresh air and brings back to the series its original standards of high quality writing. It is a shame Eric ended it at the midpoint. Baen Books offers good deals to customers with $6 ebooks and $15 collections. We should.and I do support that, but not when they offer incomplete stories posing as complete novels, not even ones this good. Had Eric finished the story, I have no doubt it would have earned five stars.
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10. Kathleen on 11/11/2010, said:

Another great read in this series. For those who haven't read the others, the book may look patchy - but it's not. The thing about the sweep of history is that it SWEEPS; a lot of the development here rests on earlier stuff, and if you haven't read it, you might miss the points. The characters are realistic and real in their actions and beliefs, and the development is logical, within the framework of the universe. I recommend that you read all of them, including the collections, in order, just so you don't miss anything - but it's not necessary. Can't wait for the next one.
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Showing comments 1-10 of 23 (Next 10) Click Here to see all comments
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