Fear Our Offal Cries!
Jan. 19th, 2009 07:18 pmI’ve just finished reading Between the Rivers, by Harry Turtledove. For more detail, follow the link, but it follows the fortunes of a particular resident of the city of Gibil who, among other achievements, manages to set off a war between his city and the neighbouring one.
Maybe it’s just me but I don’t think, if I were a native of Gibil, that I would be inspired to acts of bravery in the field by the war cry: Forward the Giblut! Forward the Giblut!
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Date: 2009-01-19 10:30 pm (UTC)Have you read David Drake/Eric Flint's Belisarius series? They're set during the late Roman period and manage to mix SF, military history and alternative history in quite a fun way. The first four of the series are available from in the Baen Free Library. I'm rather enjoying them myself.
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Date: 2009-01-19 11:00 pm (UTC)Oddly enough though, the Turtledove I have read consists mainly of the Videssos books. Oddly, because the first series kicks off with a Roman legion who fall out of historical Gaul into the
ByzantineVidessian empire. As the Byzantine Empire was the subject of Turtledove's Ph.D., his Videssian tales ought to be at least reasonable.I read them initially because
Looking back, although there are three Videssos series set at different time periods, it's only the first I remember any detail of, because of the culture clash between Rome and
ByzantiumVidessos. Might be worth a try.I'll keep an eye out for the Belisarius books. Which is Turtledove's Shakespeare one?
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Date: 2009-01-20 08:05 am (UTC)The Shakespeare one is Ruled Britannia which assumes that the Spanish Armada was successful as its historical difference point.
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Date: 2009-01-20 09:09 am (UTC)If you fancy trying the Videssos books, it's the Videssos Cycle you want first, the first book of which is The Misplaced Legion.
The other two series step further back in history, and there's a relatively recent standalone book (2005) that I haven't read yet, but which goes back further still to "the beginning".