1637, Eric Flint
1637, Eric Flint
List: $29.99 | Sale: $21.00
Club: $14.99

1637
The Transylvanian Decision

Author: Eric Flint, Robert Waters

Narrator: George Guidall

Unabridged: 16 hr 36 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 01/10/2023


Synopsis

THIS NEW NOVEL IN ERIC FLINT’S LANDMARK RING OF FIRE SERIES CONTINUES THE EASTERN EUROPE STORYLINE EXPLORED IN 1637: THE POLISH MAELSTROM

Up-timer Morris Roth and his Grand Army of the Sunrise stand at a crossroads.

Military success against the Polish-Lithuanian magnates has all but guaranteed a continued push east into Ruthenian lands. There, Roth hopes to further his Anaconda Project so that tens of thousands of Jews are not slaughtered in what’s to become known as the Chmielnicki Pogrom of 1648.

An envoy from Transylvania arrives with a promising offer from its prince, who wishes to form an alliance with Bohemia, but the land shrouded in the fog of the Carpathian mountains and known only to most up-timers as the playground of
Count Dracula is a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire. Such an alliance would surely draw the ire of Sultan Murad IV.

The United States of Europe agrees to assist the Bohemian forces, and sends in the Silesian Guard, under the command of Brigadier Jeff Higgins. They also send in Gretchen Richter to organize and lead the political struggle.

Transylvania is thrown into political, social, and religious turmoil as battle lines are drawn. Whatever happens and whoever wins the fight, one thing is certain: the history of Eastern Europe will change radically. In fact, it already has.

About Eric Flint

Eric Flint was a bestselling American author and editor celebrated for his influential contributions to science fiction and alternate history. He is best known as the creator of the Ring of Fire series, which begins with 1632, a landmark novel that reimagines a modern American town transported to seventeenth-century Europe. The series became a cornerstone of the genre, praised for its blend of rigorous historical detail, political realism, and expansive world-building.

Flint's writing frequently explored themes of social change, technology, and collective action, often emphasizing how ordinary people shape history under extraordinary circumstances. In addition to his novels, he was a longtime editor at Baen Books, where he championed innovative storytelling and supported emerging voices in speculative fiction. His collaborative projects and open-universe approach helped redefine how shared-world series could evolve.

Known for his clear, energetic prose and idea-driven narratives, Eric Flint's work translates especially well to audiobook format, where the scope and momentum of his stories shine. His legacy endures through a vast body of work that continues to engage listeners who enjoy intellectually stimulating, history-rich speculative fiction.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Marcus on January 20, 2021

This branch in the multiverse really captured my attention and it continues to hold it in this book. The characters are fun, the civil war is good, and the plot moves at a steady pace. The concepts are really interesting and having the Russian version of the constitutional convention was amazing. I'......more

Goodreads review by Dan on March 18, 2018

Pretty good. I hope the sequel comes out next year. :) 2018 re-read: Very enjoyable I hope the EArc of the sequel comes out soon.......more

Goodreads review by Sylvia on February 25, 2018

The series is stretching too far, getting boring. And yet, I keep reading.......more

Goodreads review by Debrac2014 on June 20, 2024

3.5 stars! I enjoyed this story in spite of the confusing Russian names! Father Yulian is quite a character! 2024 reread after finishing 1638 The Sovereign States! It's still a good read!......more

Goodreads review by Daniel on February 21, 2018

The Volga Rules is the sequel to 1636: Kremlin Games, itself a side-novel in the Ring of Fire alternate history series. In the former book, the Russian government hired a frequently drunk and depressed up-time Grantville resident Bernie Zeppi (whose mother died following Grantville's relocation to 1......more