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The Grantville Gazette  
Grantville Gazette
Author Eric Flint
Language English
Series

1632 series

The Grantville Gazettes
Genre(s) Alternate History
Publisher Baen
Publication date January 11, 2004 (paperback edition)
Followed by Grantville Gazette II

The Grantville Gazette (later Grantville Gazette I or more recently yet, Grantville Gazette, Volume 1) is the first of a series of professionally selected and edited fan fiction anthologies set within the 1632 series inspired by Eric Flint's novel 1632. The electronically published Grantville Gazettes, which are reaching long novel length with regularity, now make up the majority of the series.

Synopses[]

"Portraits"[]

by Eric Flint

Note: This story only appears in the print edition.

The story deals with the decision to smuggle information about antibiotics to hostile forces besieging Amsterdam, where Rebecca Stearns is trapped. It features Anne Jefferson, introduced in S. L. Viehl's Ring of Fire short story "A Matter of Consultation". As well as presenting the moral and ethical issues implicit in aiding the enemy, the story focuses heavily on artist and diplomat Pieter Paul Rubens, whose portrait of Jefferson forms the book's cover art. The events of this story are referenced in 1634: The Baltic War and other works in the series.

"Anna's Story"[]

by Loren Jones

The story focus on the farmer girl, Anna Braun, who fled from mercenaries that bowled over Police Chief Dan Frost and signaled the arrival of conflict and war at the opening of 1632. It is a poignant story that was just barely cut from Ring of Fire according to Flint in the forward, mainly because Jones already had another tale in the collection, but also because of space considerations—Ring of Fire is nearly 800 pages. The story also turns to the task of elaborating on her family's fate, and introduces a lovable if idiosyncratic farmer George Blanton who finds a new family this side of the Ring of Fire.

"Curio and Relic"[]

by Tom Van Natta

The story focus on Paul Santee, a reclusive ex-combat noncom Vietnam War veteran and gun collector, who lives isolated in the outskirts of Grantville. Set in the weeks immediately after the Ring of Fire, Santee remained unaware of his current situation until being met by Eddie Cantrell, who is one of several out-reach workers who are combing the remote regions around Grantville to make sure everyone is informed about the Grantville Emergency Committee's edicts, and soliciting resources for the Allocation Committee to manage. Furthermore, Santee learned that he is wanted by Frank Jackson into joining Grantville's established army as a trainer of cadre, as he's one of the few people who has more combat and years of general military experience than everyone else in town put together. Initially Santee flatly refused reentering into military service. Reality intrudes when a band of men ransacks his remote cabin in which Santee forced to realize just how much times have changed and that he is now dependent upon others. He takes on a position under Jackson and with the assistance of Eddie Cantrell begins to collect and organize the spare arms in the city, organizes an ammunition reloading program and trains residents who need help learning how to use their weapons. Going out with Cantrell to test fire and evaluate different load combinations in the three calibers selected for use by the New United States Army, the two stumble upon and combating brigands raiding a nearby farm. The down-timer Germans had chopped down several trees behind the battlefield of the Battle of the Crapper to gauge and evaluate the penetration power of the Grantvillers' firearms, and used the knowledge to create an armored (timberclad) wagon. Under fire from Santee and Cantrell, eight of the rogue ex-mercenaries use the timberclad wagon to begin to close on the position of the two Americans. Realizing their bullets will not penetrate, a wounded Santee bravely orders Cantrell to return to the arsenal and return with an elephant gun while he holds them in check himself. Santee and Cantrell managed to eliminate the brigands with the acquired elephant gun.

"The Sewing Circle"[]

by Gorg Huff

On the large picture level, "The Sewing Circle" is a canonical look at the meshing of the resource limited New United States with the extant economy of war-torn central Germany. On another, it is a reminder that kids are more capable than many think, and a cute Tom Sawyerish tale of entrepreneurial adventure. In Gorg Huff's well written and witty story, four American teenagers set themselves the goal of launching a new industry, waging an uphill battle against adult skepticism as well as the intrinsic difficulty of the project itself. Armed with a father who has become part of Grantville's Finance Subcommittee the one girl has a dinner conversation involving "Federal Reserve [Bank] Fairies", who magically make more money and regulate the economy. Another part is to convince the Germans and all the other down-timers that they are real, because they perform a very important function and it only works really well if most people believe in them. Grantville, newly arrived in 1631, has some fast talking to do to have its money stand up and be negotiable specie. Surprisingly, things made of or containing plastic, particularly dolls that a rich nobleman might buy a favorite daughter, are highly salable. Soon after, the four Junior High classmates, meet along the banks of a creek. Two, twin brothers Brent and Trent Partow, are mechanically inclined and the fourth, David Bartley, is smitten by the lass, the carrot-topped Sarah, who pines for one of the twins. Just to add more angst to David's life, his mother is something of an overprotective loser and his father has long departed for greener pastures—and gone back to his wife. The four kids realize resources are very limited, manpower is short as hell, and that "gearing down" is absolutely necessary from the very beginning. The kids problems are just beginning. While Mrs. Higgin's Singer is nearly 100 years old, the gap between early 20th century and 17th century manufacturing technology and techniques is vast—particularly for under-experienced would-be twin engineers not yet in high school. David turns out to have a head for organizing and management, and keeps the project moving forward with an able assist from his Grandma Higgins. She eventually bankrolls a big piece of the company, while David figures out how to make it pay. Sarah has a grasp of finance beyond her years, and teams with David—which he minds not a bit.

"The Rudolstadt Colloquy"[]

by Virginia DeMarce

This story is Virginia DeMarce's second fictional foray in the series. Like "Biting Time", the tale establishes some important canonical underpinnings that are referred to, or extrapolated upon, later in the series. This Lutheran colloquy is mentioned often in the first printed major works of the series, and occasionally crops up in the Gazettes. In addition, the story introduces several recurring characters.

"The Rudolstadt Colloquy" as historical background sits at the heart and center of the religious strife between Protestant sects which in OTL continued to divide the new churches even as they collectively battled the Roman Catholic-dominated world and that church's Counter-Reformation, the effort to reimpose a uniform religion on all of Europe. At the heart of the matter is the strongly held belief in the authoritarian philosophy, embraced by the nobility and churchmen alike, that a state cannot not stand without a uniform official religion. "From the perspective of the princes, religion was important in the 'here and now' because religion here and now was a way of making the population behave." To the modern mind, this seems a curious and perhaps incomprehensible point of view, but the modern man does not embrace the concept either that one class of people was explicitly set above all others and destined from birth to rule. Further, the position and power of all nobles draws from that belief and that of kings being the chosen and anointed protectors of both church and state, regardless of how well or poorly they conduct the business of taking care of the populace at large. Considered in that light, the colloquy and its results will be a major supporting event in the overall 1632 theme championing religious toleration. In "The Rudolstadt Colloquy", internal tensions within the Lutheran community are contrasted and displayed. In addition to the contemporary schools of Lutheran thought, there were representatives from two up-time Lutheran sects, the Missouri Synod and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, even though there were very few up-time Lutherans in Grantville. (In fact, there was only one Missouri Synod Lutheran.)

Throughout Europe, both Catholic and Protestant countries have heads of state either attending in person or sending personal envoys to the long theological debate, which is chaired by the Graf Ludwig Guenther, Count of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt. Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt happens to be among the very nearest neighbors to Grantville's geographic position. Schwarzburg, in the fictional canon, in fact is so close that the Ring of Fire (ROF) transfer of territory between space-time continuums actually cuts through the outlying houses of the town, and several more that did not go to West Virginia in OTL 2000 AD, slid down the "newly formed" destabilized cliff that resulted immediately after the ROF, as is told in detail in "Schwarza Falls". Towards the end of the novel 1634: The Baltic War, Gustavus has charged Graf Ludwig with chairing and adjudicating an even larger colloquy in the city of Magdeburg (The Magdeburg Colloquy) to settle larger issues within his new realm.

Fact Essays[]

"Radio in the 1632 Universe"[]

by Rick Boatright

"They've Got Bread Mold, So Why Can't They Make Penicillin?"[]

by Bob Gottlieb

Note: The table of contents for the print edition lists the author as "Robert Gottlief".

This essay by Bob Gottlieb gives an overview of the steps involved in discovering and producing antibiotics, as it would be affected by what would -- and wouldn't -- be available in 1630's Germany. It also gives an overview of common diseases during the Thirty Years' War in Europe, and notes that two of the most serious, plague and typhus, cannot be treated with penicillin.

"Horse Power"[]

by Karen Bergstralh

This essay by Karen Bergstralh discusses horse breeds and their characteristics, common and uncommon, in the era of the Thirty Years' War in Europe. Work output, rates and other parameters such as strength, endurance, size, and so forth. Riding horses and even the gaits and tendencies of breeds for this or that trait are discussed in some depth.

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