1635, David Carrico
1635, David Carrico
List: $30.99 | Sale: $21.70
Club: $15.49

1635
Music and Murder

Author: David Carrico

Narrator: George Guidall

Unabridged: 19 hr 49 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 12/07/2018


Synopsis

1635: Murder and Music. Music . . . It's been said that musicians live for the next new sound. Well, the musicians of Europe were presented with the biggest new sound ever when the Ring of Fire brought the future back to 1631. What will the court musicians think when they hear Bach, Stravinsky, and the Beatles? What will the street and tavern musicians think when faced with Johnny Cash, Metallica, and Nirvana? Things don't go smoothly for Marla Linder and her friends. And Murder . . . The Thirty Years War was an 'interesting' time to be alive, in the proverbial Chinese curse sense of the word. Then Grantville arrived from the future, bringing technology and philosophies that set European civilization on its ear. But that's not all that came back with Grantville. Imagine trying to establish modern police procedures in a time where neither the powers-that-be nor the people underneath them provide much support. Up-timer Byron Chieske and his down-timer partner Gotthilf Hoch walk some mean streets and lonely roads.

About David Carrico

David Carrico made his first professional SF sale to the Grantville Gazette e-magazine in 2004. His stories have also appeared in the Grantville Gazette and Ring of Fire anthologies from Baen Books and in Jim Baen's Universe e-magazine. Baen Books published Carrico's e-book story collection 1635: Music and Murder, as well as two novels written in collaboration with Eric Flint: 1636: The Devil's Opera and The Span of Empire, which was nominated for the 2017 Dragon Award for Best Military SF or Fantasy novel.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Winston

I really dislike Virginia DeMarce as an author. I'm pretty sure that I could properly label the writer of each chapter in this book by how painful I found it to read. The fact that the story spends more time describing the different familial arrangements for Thanksgiving dinner then it does the reac......more

Goodreads review by Jeremy

I like the Ring of Fire, but good God, this was tedious. The writing isn't totally clunky or anything, and there are some decent bits - anything relating to the actual plot was just fine. But a very large chunk of the book is devoted to the kind of infinitely boring family dynamics that are only of......more

This story was on a par with the Ram Rebellion, tho had it's moments! I never thought I'd see Nasi riding off into the sunset on a motorcycle!......more

Goodreads review by Joe

I really loved the 1st couple books of the series (1632 and 1633) but since it's become a franchise with different writers, things have gone down hill a bit. It's simply too ambitious as far as big ideas and plot goes, and still tries to have good characters and character moments. While it succeeds......more

Goodreads review by Dan

2018 re-read: About 2/3rds of this is drudgery comprised of who won't attend Easter diner with who, how obnoxious old crones hate each other, their family, and the world, mixed inwith familial strife and chapter after chapter of familial minutiae. The last 15% or so makes it worth skimming ove the e......more