Eric Flint's 1632 & Beyond: Alternate History Stories

1632 & Beyond Issue #012

$5.99

Redbird Institute is a new venue a few miles east of the Ring of Fire that we challenged our authors to write in. They wrote enough stories for two issues! We start with non-fiction, “What is Redbird?” to learn about our new locale.

The tale begins when Countess Emelie and Count Ludwig Guenther get an idea in Bjorn Hasseler’s “Chautauqua, Disney, and the World’s Fair.” The traveling part of Redbird faces an early challenge in Tracy Morris’s “But Will It Play In Peoria?” “Renamed” by Bethanne Kim shows Pioneer Scouts hard at work in Redbird’s steep hills while George McClellan Grant relates the building from an unexpected point of view in “That Old Chestnut.” Michael Knopp’s “Escaping The What-Ifs” shows some challenges building a cog railroad.

More opportunities arise in “A Flask And A Handshake” by Natalie Silk. Not everyone is a fan of this bold new venture, as we find out in Marc Tyrrell’s “To Kill A Redbird.”

Description

Issue #10 of Eric Flint’s 1632 & Beyond, available 1 July 2025.

Eric Flint’s 1632 & Beyond Issue #12

1632 & Beyond Issue #12

This issue of Eric Flint’s 1632 & Beyond is the first one in which all the stories focus on a single theme. That is Redbird Institute, a new STEM, arts, and vacation venue a few miles east of the Ring of Fire.

State Library Papers

(Non-Fiction)

This is our first issue that opens with a non-fiction article. It’s “What is Redbird?” by Bethanne Kim. It’s background information for the entire issue.

Redbird Reader

(Fiction)

The tale begins with Countess Emelie and Count Ludwig Guenther in “Chautauqua, Disney, and the World’s Fair” by Bjorn Hasseler.

There’s also a traveling component which faces an early challenge in Tracy Morris’s “But Will It Play In Peoria?”

Opportunities arise, and some people seize them in “Renamed” by Bethanne Kim.

Redbird is up in steep hills and needs a special railroad. Not all experiments go well. See Michael Knopp’s “Escaping The What-Ifs.”

More opportunities arise in “A Flask And A Handshake” by Natalie Silk. But you do want those close to you to take them?

George McClellan Grant relates the building of Redbird from an unusual perspective in “That Old Chestnut.”

Not everyone is a fan, as we find out in Marc Tyrrell’s “To Kill A Redbird.”

These stories take us from idea to construction to the opening days of the first season. In next issue (#13), we will explore more stories set during Redbird’s first season.

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