The Grantville Gazette

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Grantville Gazette
Cover art for the paperback edition (by Thomas Kidd)
Cover art for the paperback edition (by Thomas Kidd)

Grantville Gazette I Trade Paperback cover (No hardcover edition published).
Author Eric Flint, et al.
Cover artist Thomas Kidd
Country United States
Language English
Series 1632 series
Genre(s) Science fiction; alternate history
Publisher Baen Books
Publication date PB: November, 2004
Media type E-book & Print (paperback)
Pages 361 pages
ISBN ISBN 0-7434-8860-1
Preceded by Ring of Fire (anthology)
and 1633 (novel)
Followed by Grantville Gazette II
and 1634: The Galileo Affair (novel)
Cover art for the eMagazine edition (by Thomas Kidd)
Cover art for the eMagazine edition (by Thomas Kidd)

Grantville Gazette I and Grantville Gazette, Volume 1 both redirect to here.

The Grantville Gazette (later Grantville Gazette I or more recently yet, Grantville Gazette, Volume 1) is the first of a series of collaborative anthologies that now form a substantial sub-set of books within the 1632 series inspired by Eric Flint's novel 1632. The series now numbers twenty-six works of all kinds including e-published only works (e-books) of which twelve are standard trade printed books (Three [of eighteen of the bi-monthly Gazettes, and counting] are the printed canonical Grantville Gazettes (I , II , and III , the first of which is almost entirely longer fiction Flint couldn't put in the already lengthy Ring of Fire shared universe collection, the de facto first sequel antedating collaborative work on 1633, and of which two have been best sellers) in print plus the electronically published the Grantville Gazettes which are now reaching long novel length with regularity, making up the majority of the series for the foreseeable future. Because of a soft market for anthologies, it is not anticipated that most of the Gazettes will reach print, save perhaps as a "Best of" type of collection, despite the publication of the first three in print.

The Gazettes were originally an experiment initially published as serialized e-magazines and then as e-books taking a page from the Baen Books experience with EARCs—Electronic Advanced Reader Copies, which had been instituted several years earlier. The electronic sales were successful and Baen contracted with Flint for ten issues, to be published 3-4 times per year and each would form part of the canonical background for the other works (novels and anthologies) in the rapidly growing Ring of Fire series. Subsequent results were that they were published far less regularly as Baen found itself undermanned to maintain the production pace leaving the next issues waiting for a free window of opportunity for the Baen copy editors and production staff to ready the next. Grantville Gazette X was produced jointly by Baen and Eric Flint Enterprises which now e-delivers a new issue bimonthly.

Contents

[edit] Series premise

Main article: 1632 series

The first novel, 1632 and resultant 1632 series share a common theme, which is to ask the "What if?" questions common to and characteristic of the science fiction genre: "What if a mysterious cosmic event occurred which juxtaposed the location of a whole populated region of West Virginia with a matching portion of early modern Germany?" Flint added the additional query to his premise: "What if the two places also switched their respective places in time so that the region from our here-now traveled back in space-time to the land and peoples of 369 years ago?" Mix in a character focus repudiating the Great Man theory of history, making the whole town of Rednecked Hillbillies and German Rednecks your collective protagonists allowing plenty of scope for fast-paced parallel plot development, add two cups of calculating authoritarian noblemen who think only social-class matters, a pinch of venile grasping clergymen, and a quart each of American law, American tradition, American can-do elan, and half a pound of American attitudes and the reader can begin to imagine the fun they'll have interacting in interesting times when High-Tech means just-invented flintlock rifles.

[edit] Authors

The various other authors featured in the Gazettes are part of Flint's online experiment[1] (Phase II) in developing a milieu in conjunction with many others on the web forum Baen's Bar. For specifics see the sub-article 1632 Editorial Board. These authors first submit to a tough peer review process, which is the province and venue of the 1632 Slushpile sub-forum (Slushpile is publishers terminology for the stack of unsolicited manuscripts— The term is no longer appropo, as 1632 Slush does solicit submissions now.[2]).

Once critical readers have deemed the nascent story worthy, the work passes to an editorial board, which also considers how the work will fit into and affect the milieu as currently planned out and plotted. Some stories have thus served as the genesis of their own 1632 universe sub-series or plot thread. This is chaired by Flint, who retains veto power over all work in the 1632 universe, and who then decides to which issue or volume of the Gazette the story should be allocated. Authors originally got paid a sub-professional rate upon the acceptance of the work by Flint from Baen, and additional financial remuneration and considerations when the anthology reaches print at a later time. In the evolution after Jim Baen's death, Flint launched a separate members only by subscription web e-zine at grantvillegazette.com which is both Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA) certified, and pays pro-rates—SFWA certification is important to new writers who need three published stories to qualify for SFWA membership.

The Gazettes thus contain short stories based in the world of Flint's 1632 series, and articles about the restrictions on technology available in the time-stranded town and the plausibility of items and redeveloped technology within the milieu of the 1632 multiverse; these essays are written by a member of a more formal subset of contributor-advisors known as the 1632 Research Committee.

[edit] Table of Contents

Grantville Gazette Volume I
Table of Contents
Title Writer Page
About Baen's Bar Online community and
Editor's Preface for the Paperback Edition
by Eric Flint p  1

Fiction
     
Portraits by Eric Flint* p  5
Anna's Story by Loren Jones p 17
Curio and Relic by Tom Van Natta* p 77
The Sewing Circle by Gorg Huff* p115
The Rudolstadt Colloquy by Virginia DeMarce* p233

Fact Articles
       
Radio in the 1632 Universe by Rick Boatright* p297
They've Got Bread Mold, So Why
Can't They Make Penicillin?
by Robert Gottlief* p319
Horse Power by Karen Bergstralh* p335
Afterword by Eric Flint p361
*  Writer is a member of 1632 Research Committee or 1632 Editorial Board, or both.


[edit] Story synopses

[edit] "Portraits"

"Portraits", by Eric Flint, 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.

[edit] "Anna's Story"

Loren Jones takes up the task of answering "What ever happened" to that farm girl fleeing those mercenaries that bowled over 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 Ms. 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 families fate, and introduces a lovable if idiosycratic farmer who finds a new family this side of the Ring of Fire.

[edit] "Curio and Relic"

Tom Van Natta tells the tale of a reclusive ex-combat veteran and gun collector who lives so far from Grantville center there is no longer any roads connecting his cabin with the world. Set in the weeks immediately after the ROF, Eddie Cantrell is one of several out-reach workers who are combing the nether regions about Grantville to make sure everyone is informed about the Grantville Emergency Committee's edicts, and soliciting resources for the Allocation Committee to manage. Frank Jackson has his heart set on Vietnam War veteran Paul Santee , a noncom who was a "tunnel rat", joining the army as a trainer of cadre, for he has more combat and years of general military experience than everyone else in town put together, excepting John Chandler Simpson. Santee carries shrapnel around in one hip and the last thing he wants is to train snot-nosed kids, or to enter military discipline himself again.

Reality intrudes when a band of men ransacks his remote cabin and he realizes just how much times have changed and that he was now dependent upon others. He takes on a position under Jackson with the assistance of Eddie Cantrell begins to collect and organize the spare arms in the city, organizes an ammunition reloading program and train residents who need it, 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 (NUS) Army the two stumble upon brigands raiding a nearby farm and become involved in the Battle of Crapper Lane. 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.

[edit] "The Sewing Circle"

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.


   "I take it," said Daaad, "that you don't believe in Federal Reserve Fairies? That's just the problem, don't you see? Neither do the down-timers, at least not yet. Part of my new job with the finance subcommittee is to keep the Federal Reserve Fairies happy.
   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. On thing which is surprisingly salable is things with plastics, particularly dolls that a rich nobleman might buy a favorite daughter.


   His face grew comically lugubrious. "Now, when people don't believe in the Fed Fairies, they have to come up with some other explanation for where the money comes from. Like, 'The Government.' The problem is, governments always need money, and if they can make it themselves, well, people are afraid they will. And that they will keep on making more of it until it takes thousands of dollars to buy a ham sandwich. So, an important part of my new job is to convince the down-timers that Mike Stearns can't just make more money whenever he wants to. That, instead of the government making the decisions, the Fed Fairies will decide how much American money there is, so they can trust American money to hold its value."
   

Sarah was always happy to play along with her father's teasing of her little sister. "How are you going to make the fairies happy so they will make more money and we can all be rich?"
    "The more stuff there is to buy, the more money you can have without the prices going up too much. We brought quite a bit of stuff with us through the Ring of Fire, but to make the Fed Fairies really happy, we need to find stuff that we can make here."
   

The rest of the evening was spent in discussion of production and levels of usage. In spite of the dry subject matter, or perhaps because it isn't quite so dry as most people think when presented right, it was an enjoyable conversation, and even Judy the Younger had fun.

Soon after, the four Junior High classmates, meet along the banks of a creek. Two, Brent and Trent Partow, are twin brothers, are mechanically inclined and the fourth, David Bartley, is smitten by the lass, the carrot-topped Sarah, who pines for one of the twins.[3] Just to add more angst to Davids life, his mother is something of an overprotective loser and his father has long departed for greener pastures—and went 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.

Then they tried to eliminate the impractical. But what makes the difference between practical and impractical? That is not so easy a thing to determine, and each kid came at the question from a different angle. To Brent and Trent it was still very much a game, so their version of practical had more to do with interesting than anything else. Sarah imagined presenting her parents with a list of things that could be sold and gaining their respect, so her version paid much attention to what would be salable.
   David was the only one who was actually looking for something that would make a good investment for his family. His problem was, he really wasn't sure what that meant.
   

All in all, the whole thing was a lot of fun. Some things—nails, for example—were eliminated when Sarah informed them someone else was already working on them. The finance subcommittee was apparently keeping track of that sort of thing. Other things, such as airplanes, were marked as practical but not for them. A number of things were marked as practical for them; but they didn't stop at the first of these, since they had agreed to go through the whole list.
    Then they reached the sewing machine. Brent, who had little interest in sewing, proclaimed that it was impractical because it needed an electric motor—and they had already determined that for them, the electric motor was impractical. David remembered his grandmother's old Singer and that it had been converted from treadle power. This was not actually true, merely a family rumor, but David didn't know that. So he pointed out that a sewing machine did not need an electric motor, which was true.
    Sarah, who recognized the root motive of Brent's rejection of the sewing machine—sexism, pure and simple—naturally took a firm position in favor of the sewing machine.
    Poor Trent didn't know which way to turn. Arguing with Brent was dear to his heart, as was tearing down impossible schemes, but sewing machines were for girls.
    "They're too complicated," he claimed, "we could never make one from an encyclopedia entry. We would need a design or a model or something." "We have one!" David was well pleased to be on Sarah's side against Brent. "At least my grandma has one, and it's old. It was converted from treadle or pedal power to electric sometime, but all they did was put on an electric motor to replace the pedals."
    What are you going to do when faced with such intransigence? You just have to show them. Trent and Brent were going to show that it could not be done. David and Sarah, that it could.
    She was a bit surprised when the kids wanted to look at her old Singer. Kids took an interest in the oddest things. She showed it off readily enough. She was rather proud of it; almost a hundred years old, and still worked well.
   

* * *

Brent was converted. There were all sorts of gadgets and doohickeys, and neat ways of doing things. Figuring out what did what and why, and what they could make, and what they could replace with something else would be loads of fun. Trent resisted for a while, but not long. A sewing machine really is a neat piece of equipment.

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 underexperienced 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 project becomes "Real" to the adults in town after the following exchange:

"It works like this, Grandma. We have a sewing machine. If we sell it, it's gone. Mr. Marcantonio's machine shop could make sewing machines if we didn't need it to make other stuff, but eventually it's going to have breakdowns, and it won't be able to make sewing machines any more. Especially if all it's making is sewing machine parts and not machine shop parts to keep the machine shop running. But if Mr. Marcantonio's shop makes some machines that make sewing machine parts, then when those machines break down we have some place to go to get more of them. Every step away from just taking what we have and selling it costs more, but means it takes longer for us to run out of stuff to sell. The machines that make the sewing machine parts don't have to be as complicated as those in Mr. Marcantonio's shop, because they don't need to be as flexible. 'Almost tools,' Brent says."

Just to make their life more complicated, an ambitious seventeenth-century German blacksmith has been eying the American's material wealth and has designs to marry into their budding commercial empire and take it over lock, stock and barrel.

characters in "The Sewing Circle"
(in order of appearance)
  1. Delia Ruggles Higgins
  2. Ramona Higgins Bartley and her boys David and Donny
  3. David Bartley
  4. Don Bartley (Donny), possibly Donovan see "Uncle" Donovan - check
  1. Fletcher Wendell
  2. Judy Wendell, the eldar; formerly Judy Higginscheck
  1. Sarah Wendell
  2. Judy Wendell, the younger -- younger sister of Sarah, a central character in the later sequels as part of the "[[1632 institutions#{{{1}}}|{{{1}}}]]"
  3. Hayley ???
  4. Vicky ???
  5. Brent Partow
  6. Trent Partow
  7. "Uncle" Donovan - David Bartley's quasi-stepfather, Donny's biological father
  8. Mr. Marcantonio - Machine shop owner that helps kids build the specialty production machines

[edit] "The Rudolstadt Colloquy"

'Setting: University of Jena, April of 1633[4]

This story is Virginia DeMarce's second fictional foray in the series and like "Biting Time" , the tale establishes some important canonical underpinnings that draw references, or are extrapolated upon in the various novel sequels. It is likely that no other event introduced in a short story is mentioned as often as this protestant (Lutheran) Colloquy is mentioned in the first printed major works of the series, and that ignores the more voluminous lengths of the thirteen Gazettes existing solely as e-published works, where it occasionally also crops up. The Rudolstadt Colloquy as historical background sits at the heart and center of the religious strife between Protestant sects which in our time line (OTL, or the real history of Europe) 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 believe by the authoritarian philosophies embraced by the nobility and churchmen alike that a state could not stand without a uniform official religion. 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 goes to that belief and that the position of kings being the chosen and anointed protectors of both church and state, regardless of how well or poorly they conducted the business of taking care of the populous at large. Considered in that light, the colloquy and it's results is 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 including the up-timer splinter sect, __________, whose position is scandalously presented by a woman. Heads of State throughout Europe, both Catholic and Protestant either have the heads of state attending in person or by proxy by sending a personal envoy to the long theological debates, which is chaired by the Graf Ludwig Guenther, Count of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, both towns of which happen to be among the very nearest neighbors to Grantvilles 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 "Swaraza Falls" in the anthology Grantville Gazette V. Towards the end of the novel 1634: The Baltic War, Gustavus has charged Graf Ludwig with chairing and adjudicating an even larger coloquy in the city of Magdeburg (The Magdeburg Coloquy[5]) to settle larger issues within his new realm.


[edit] Fact Essays on 1632 Tech

Fact essays are put together by individuals or groups heavily involved with the discussion conference 1632 Tech Manual, or directly with 1632 Research Committee. As a rule, the "Baen's Barflys" who haunt the 1632 Tech conferences tends to be mature, well-established affectionados in the heart of middle age, which is to say experienced and expert within their realm of expertise.

[edit] "Radio in the 1632 Universe"

Rick Boatright makes his living in technology and is a technophile and ham radio enthusiast who has been advising Flint, et al. on radio matters in the 1632 universe. Amongst other matters discussed in the essay, Boatright explains that Grantville reached Europe during the height of a Maunder minimum, which means that radios are shorter ranged and less effective because of the reduced ionization in the atmosphere due to the lack of sunspot activity. Manufacturing hurdles, bottlenecks, and pitfalls are discussed as well as relatively lower end radios, the "famous" crystal sets of the early 20th century, which in a variety of the series' works is the current mass market technology of the neohistorical day—large radio towers have been constructed by the New United States (NUS) and the United States of Europe (USE) in several cities and can receive Voice of America broadcasts out to about 50 miles (80 km). This is not an inconsiderable institution, Prime Minister Mike Stearns is counting on small seemingly innocuous "improvements" offered by the up-timer technology and knowledge to inflict "a death by a thousand cuts" to the underpinnings of the old society and its unquestioned unconscious acceptance of authority to pull of the goal announced at the first Emergency town meeting: "to hold the American Revolution right here 150 years early".[6]


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

by Robert Gottlief

[edit] "Horse Power"

This essay by Karen Bergstralh discusses horse breeds and their characteristics common and uncommon to the era of the Thirty Years' War and 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.

[edit] Publishing history

This first gazette was envisioned as an e-magazine experiment funded by Baen Books, originally to be published solely as a monthly electronic serialized-book anthology from Baen Books. The experimental joint venture between author-editor Flint and publisher Jim Baen was so successful that the e-magazine has become a sustained, self-funding operation of its own, now with Grantville Gazette VII in pre-production and Grantville Gazette VI released in March 2006 as a serialized e-magazine. Publication by e-magazine and e-book release is tabulated in the main article: The Grantville Gazettes, but the pattern will be broken with Grantville Gazette III — it will be released solely in the three book formats as Eric Flint has become the editor of the new Jim Baen's UNIVERSE e-magazine venture.

In November 2004, The Grantville Gazette was also released in a mass market paperback edition. The second volume was released in hardcover in March 2006, and Grantville Gazette III was released in hardcover in January 2007, and the fourth (delayed by the death of Jim Baen) has been purchased by Baen and should be released in early 2008.



As of October 2007 electronic editions were available up to volume Fourteen, the first ten through Baen's webscription, and the sub-series is arguably open ended considering its ongoing momentum.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Flint, Eric, (ed.); and various others. The Grantville Gazette (anthology, volume I), 2 (of 361). “But, in the meantime, the fan-fic kept getting written, and people kept nudging me—okay, pestering me, but I try to be polite about such things—to give them my feedback on their stories. ... Once I realized how many stories were being written—a number of them of publishable quality—I raised with Jim Baen the idea of producing an online magazine which would pay for fiction and factual articles set in the 1632 universe and would be sold through Baen Books' Webscriptions service. Jim was willing to try it, to see what happens.” 
  2. ^ Flint, Eric, (ed.); and various others. The Grantville Gazette (anthology, volume I), 2 (of 361). “But, in the meantime, the fan-fic kept getting written, and people kept nudging me—okay, pestering me, but I try to be polite about such things—to give them my feedback on their stories. ... Once I realized how many stories were being written—a number of them of publishable quality—I raised with Jim Baen the idea of producing an online magazine which would pay for fiction and factual articles set in the 1632 universe and would be sold through Baen Books' Webscriptions service. Jim was willing to try it, to see what happens.” 
  3. ^ Flint, Eric, (ed.); and various others. The Grantville Gazette (anthology, volume I), page cited missing (of 361). “David Bartley had a crush on Sarah Wendell; which he of course, would never admit to. This was bad enough. What made it worse, was that Sarah had a crush on Brent Partow; which, of course, she would never admit to. Brent and his twin brother Trent were David's best friends, and had been since his family moved to Grantville in ninety-six.” 
  4. ^ DeMarce, Goodlett and Flint, in 1634: The Ram Rebellion , "The Rudolstadt Colloquy" in Grantville Gazette I, and the http://www.1632.org official "timeframes" spreadsheet(s) (GG15 version, retrieved 2007-12-26)
  5. ^ Flint, and Weber. The Baltic War, 723 (of 723). “reference to Ludwig I count of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt: "Conducting a Lutheran colloquy in Magdeburg on behalf of Gustav II Adolf". 
  6. ^ Flint, 1632, ca. Chapter 5-6, some paraphrasing possible.

[edit] External links