[Grantville Gazette 31] • Grantville Gazette, Volume 31

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Kristine Kathryn Rusch talks about the way times have changed in ourtime line in her column Notes From the Buffer Zone. Well, what about theway times might have changed in the new time line of 1632?Lots of differences, don't you think? There's the breakdown ofsocial barriers, as portrayed in James Copley's "Margarete's Rose."Technology makes its mark in Jack Carroll's "Storm Signals." Somethingas simple as an April Fool joke causes a bit of, er, irritation on thepart of one man in Iver P. Cooper's "Lion's Tower," not to mention thechanges brought about by the railroads, which you can read about inIver's "Stitching the Country Together."Henneberg experiences a wrenching change in Virginia DeMarce's "TheRed Flage of Henneberg." Swiss Army knives? Maybe not so much. SeeKim Schoeffel's "Me Fecit Solingen Nicht" for what could happen there.Papermaking has lots of potential for improvement, as in Terry Howard's"The Future Is Where You Started."And not all the things the up-timer's bring are good things. Checkout what's happening to the grapes and wine-making industry in KerrynOfford's "Rotkäppchen." Music we know will be affected, and Enrico Toroand David Carrico demonstrate that in "Euterpe, Episode 4." HerbSakalaucks is back with the next episode of what might be going on inthe New World in "Northwest Passage, Part Six."Now, back in our own timeline, what might go on in space sometimein the future? Check out Jason K. Chapman's "The Long Fall" for one takeon that.Grantville Gazette 31. Ready for you now.Auszeichnung : isbn searchedYear : 2010Wörter : 80378
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Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- Eric & Goodlett
Flint
Paula - Language
- English
- Release date
- 2010