Eric Flint's 1632 & Beyond: Alternate History Stories

1632 & Beyond Issue #018

$5.99

“When The Bell Went Silent,” by Chuck Thompson and Griffin Barber, is set in the Mughal Empire. Dara Shikoh needs a navy, and some are really unhappy about that. This is our first short story set in India.

Weather forecasts have been mentioned in the 1632 series. Now we get the story of how those came about. George McClellan Grant brings us “A Break In The Clouds.”

The USE has radios, and Venice is starting to put the pieces together. It starts with “Rumors on the Rialto” by Jack Carroll.

All the up-timers have things they want from up-time, but some have things they need. The Fire Department’s solution? “Shut Up And Train More” by Owain Alexander.

What happens when you explore up-time knowledge and find an up-time fairy tale that’s strikingly similar to your own family history. Pascal Durand brings us the fascinating story of “Who Killed Snow White?”

Sometimes you can’t trust your own perception. What do you do then? Find out in “Through The Eyes of a Canine” by Cray Dimensional.

Description

Issue #18 of Eric Flint’s 1632 & Beyond, available 1 June 2026.

1632 & Beyond Issue #18

“Rope and Bell” By Chuck Thompson & Griff Barber – The USE has made a staunch ally of Sultan Dara Shikoh, ruler of India’s Mughal Empire, a land rich in resources the space-time-displaced Americans badly need and are willing to trade up-time technology for. John Ennis, a road works crew chief with a score of talents and the sultan have become close friends, brothers in arms. The sultan has tasked John with helping construct a fleet of timberclad warships to protect the empire’s coasts and rivers from various threats, but one enemy, an ancient and insidious evil, has plans to thwart that effort with violence!

“A Break In The Clouds” By George M. Grant – The people of Grantville face many challenges in their new existence, and quickly identify one that has far reaching impact on nearly every aspect of their lives. Efforts begin to tackle this problem using up-time know-how, but it turns out to be a group of brilliant down-timers who make accomplishing the critical task of weather prediction possible.

“Rumors On The Rialto” By Jack Carroll – Various European powers have begun to notice that the USE has a strange knack for gaining access to important information at a great distance much more rapidly than a pigeon could carry it. They are aware that the new science of radio is part of that equation, but it seems there is more to it than the Americans are telling them. Retired Venetian physician and Grantville trained ham radio operator Dottore Cosimo van Castre may prove to be the man with the answers.

“Shut Up and Train More” By Owain Alexander – The Grantville County Volunteer Fire Department is small, and needs new equipment they can never get, but it’s full of heart and determination despite all the setbacks. These dedicated men and women are the humble real life heroes who will go against all odds to keep the people safe, when disaster strikes they are always the first to arrive.

“Who Killed Snow White” By Pascal Durand – While young Prince Georg Friedrich of Waldeck found Grantville’s many miraculous features fascinating, nothing astounded him more than learning his great-great-grand-aunt Margaretha von Waldeck was famed in their literature, having provided the real life model for the legendary Snow White, a story distorted by time and perhaps subterfuge. Now the prince feels it his duty to separate the myth from the truth, embarking on a quest to learn his ancestor’s true fate.

“Through The Eyes Of A Canine” By Cray Dimensional – Young Hilde flees an angry mob of villagers with her faithful dog Bruno. She has been accused of burning a neighbor’s wheat field, but the voices in her head can’t agree if she is innocent or not! Hilde will surely be burned as a witch, but fortunately the town of Grantville lays in her path and she will find her answers there, along with the help and understanding she so desperately needs.

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