1632 plot threads
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1632 plot threads refers to the complex mix of overall story arches or sequences within the best selling alternate history series Ring of Fire, which grew rapidly from a stand-alone novel (1632) to published works numbering in the high teens as of October 2007—and most of that since 2004. This article will attempt to survey the general meaning of the term plot threads within the series and on the very active Baen's Bar web discussion forums related to the series, in particular, 1632 Tech Manual which is the sub-forum where many of the details of the shared universe mega-series have been hammered out, researched and reported on to other participants.
[edit] Approaches
Milieu creator, series Editor, and keeper of the fictional canon Eric Flint has opined he thinks in terms of plot threads in terms of major protagonists. But most web chatter devolves around geographical "spheres of influence", locations, or where protagonists have a general effect. As a series focused on displaying a believable neohistory given the series beginning—of being as realistic as possible given the initial series premises—the two approaches both fail equally in covering all the cases by any strict measure, because the rich character set who is starring in one thread will almost invariably appear in one or more other story lines as a personal departure point for that characters personal biographical history, or as a supporting role for events depicted in a book mainly covering events in another thread.
[edit] Messy history
"Real history is messy," Flint has written in the foreword to Ring of Fire in explaining why he took the unusual step of opening a universe consisting of a single novel at the time into a shared universe. A champion of the common man, Flint disdains the "Strong Man theory of History", where big figures of heroic scope define events, but instead lays claim throughout the entirety of works in the series, that history is the small actions of common men acting in their own self-interest who in the aggregate determine historical forces and force events and responses from those in power, who might lay some claim to being a giant of history—the statesmen and power brokers who dot the I's and cross the T's and add occasional curlicues to the historic march of events—riding the torrent far more often than leading it in Churchillian or Rooseveltian fashion. That some persons of that mold have existed is not disputed, but that the narrative report that makes up historical reporting tends to overstate their impact and role, is Flints theme.
[edit] Series premise
[edit] Plot threads
No matter what approach one takes to classifying a plot sequence in the series—be it geographical or character based—the key element of the series to comprehend is that the events depicted in its now voluminous works are not taking place in a vacuum, but in most cases are concurrent with developments in other parts of the European center. Indeed, in a October 2007 announcement on his web site, Flint announced an agreement that the three joint books (under contract since 2002) with best selling author David Weber will take place in a Naval thread, indicating the Eurocentric focus of the series, at least taken with some expressed interest by Michael Stearns to curtail slave trading before it builds up steam, will likely create settings well outside Europe as the technologically advanced naval capabilities of the United States of Europe (USE) give it a reach not available to the average European power, even if it resorts to sailing ships over oceanic distances where the Emergency Committee and New United States (NUS) authorities were careful to hide key portions of their library resources in order to maintain a technological edge as they gear down.
[edit] Geographical threads
[edit] Central European thread
The "Central European thread" or more correctly, the "Central and Southwest Central European thread", is the "main plot thread" of the series. It concerns events in the region from west to east of the kingdom of England and Kingdom of Scotland, Northern France, The Spanish Netherlands, French Netherlands and the Dutch Republic, and the whole of western Germany eastwards to Brandenburg (where Gustavus entered the continent) the Electorate of Saxony, and southerly to the northern reaches of Bavaria. Bavaria proper, Switzerland, Austria, Bohemia and points easterly and north are properly geographically part of the Eastern European thread as the breakdown of sequels focuses a reader's attention.
[edit] Eastern European thread
The only fiction written within this theatre thus far is the novelette "The Wallenstein Gambit" and the prequel short stories leading up to it, all published in Ring of Fire , but the forthcoming sequels 1635: Soldier of Bohemia was long delayed while resolving the demanding schedules of Flint and David Weber— which delayed the whole series for several years as the 1634: The Baltic War sequel would have been adversely affected. 1635: The Eastern Front is also believed to be set in the Eastern thread, and The Anaconda Project continues from where the Wallenstein Gambit left off.
The original "working title" of Soldier of Bohemia was 1635: King of Bohemia, and that title and clues revealed in 1634: The Bavarian Crisis, which in the most part geographically can be laid in this regional setting. The solo Flint novel, The Anaconda Project (Serialized to date solely in the Grantville Gazettes) is also in the setting, and is believed to be the prequel to Soldier of Bohemia which it is speculated, will center it's action on the reactions of the new king of Austria-Hungry, Ferdinand III of Austria, and his attack on Wallenstein even as he makes peace with Gustavus and the United States of Europe (USE), or not.
[edit] Southern European thread
The "Southern European thread", or "Western South Europe and South Central European thread", or perhaps more appropriately, the "South-central and southwestern European thread" involves characters introduced in the short story "To Dye For" by Mercedes Lackey but the thread plot action proper kicked off in the second published novel sequel of the series, the best selling 1634: The Galileo Affair and its direct sequel, 1635: The Cannon Law, both co-written by Flint and Andrew Dennis. The main characters are in part, Lackey's The Stone Family, combined with Flint's Sharon Nichols and Larry Mazarre.
[edit] Notes and references
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
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