Description
Grantville Gazette Issue #2 Contents:
“Steps In The Dance” Eric Flint
“Collateral Damage” Mike Spehar
“The Company Men” Christopher James Weber
“Just One Of Those Days” Leonard Hollar
“God’s Gifts” Gorg Huff
“Bottom Feeders” by John Zeek
“Euterpe, Episode 1” by Enrico Toro
“An Invisible War, Part I” by Danita Lee Ewing
Nonfiction:
“A Quick and Dirty Treatise on Historical Fencing” by Enrico Toro
“So You Want To Do Telecommunications In 1633?” by Rick Boatright
“Mente et Malleo: Practical Mineralogy and Minerals Exploration in 1632” by Laura Runkle
“The Secret Book Of Zink” by Andrew Clark
From the Editor:
The new United States in central Germany launches a one-plane Doolittle Raid on Paris, France. The target: their arch-enemy, Cardinal Richelieu. Meanwhile, an ambassador from the Mughal Empire of northern India is being held captive in Austria by the Habsburg dynasty. Mike Stearns decides to send a mercenary company to rescue him, led by two seventeenth-century mercenary officers: an Englishman and a Irishman, who seem to spend as much time fighting each other as they do the enemy.
Mike Spehar’s “Collateral Damage” and Chris Weber’s “The Company Men” are just two of the stories contained in this second volume of the Grantville Gazette. In other stories:
— a prominent Italian musician decides to travel to Grantville to investigate the music of the future;
— an American archer and a Finnish cavalryman become friends in the middle of a battlefield;
— a Lutheran pastor begins a theological challenge to the establishment based on his interpretation of the Ring of Fire;
— American and German detectives become partners to investigate a murder;
— and, in the first part of Danita Ewing’s serialized short novel, An Invisible War, the new United States founds a medical school in Jena despite resistance from up-timers and down-timers alike.
The second volume of Grantville Gazette also contains factual articles which explain some of the technical background for the 1632 series, including articles on practical geology, telecommunications, and seventeenth-century swordsmanship.
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