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Gunpowder Empire (Crosstime Traffic Book
One) by Harry Turtledove
pub: TOR. 288 page hardback. Price: $24.95 (US),
$34.95 (CAN). ISBN: 0-765-30693-X.
check out website:
www.tor.com
'If
things had been different and the Black Death hadn't put paid to
the Holy Roman Empire, then the chances are we would have all been
speaking Latin.
Happily for us, the trade routes utilised by the black rats saw
the decline and fall of Rome and the opportunity for other Empires
to rise. In a new book by Harry Turtledove aimed at teenage readers,
the possibility of an alternate history is seriously considered.
In
one reality, the Roman Empire thrives and has settled at a very
low level of technology with only the addition of gunpowder to spice
it up. In another, the Nazis won the war and created another more
hideous empire. And so on, ad infinitum.
There are as many worlds as there are twists in history. Jeremy
Solter's world is the future, pretty much, of our world. We have
discovered it is possible to travel into parallel worlds using a
new form of crosstime technology. Jeremy's parents work for the
Corporation Crosstime Traffic that has exploited these new trade
routes to supplement our world of depleted resources.
The basic set-up is that all the worlds are accessible. Some worlds
have already been isolated due to the unforeseen consequence of
bringing back unknown diseases for which there is no cure. Other
worlds are just too awful and dangerous to visit. For Jeremy, holidays
don't mean a trip to Ibiza but perhaps two weeks in a market town
on the edge of the Empire, near Romania.
This vacation is not supposed to be any different. Jeremy and his
sister, Amanda, join their parents. They are well versed in the
language and the customs: nothing can go wrong. Then their Mum goes
down with appendicitis. She will die if she stays in a world with
no surgeons or anaesthetics. Jeremy's parents leave the children
hoping to return in a few days but the link to their own world is
suddenly severed.
Jeremy and Amanda must fend for themselves and avoid detection.
They have to deal with the locals, face the prospect of staying
there forever and, worse than that, a war has started and the town
is under siege. If you think there is already too much choice in
the supermarket, imagine a world where there is no limit to the
products and variety available if you are willing to pay the price.
Truly, this is a land of plenty and Jeremy's family enjoy the challenge
of living in a different world. What they do notice is their own
conflicting morality and attitudes that sometimes weigh heavily
upon them.
Amanda finds she cannot be friends with a slave girl as it offends
the morals of her other acquaintances. But how can she square her
twenty-first century conscience and live in the Roman world? Worst
still how would she survive, if she really was stranded for good?
Jeremy finds out first hand how bloody war can be and contemplates
his own chances of survival if he had to help defend the town from
a marauding army.
This book is a fascinating look at what might have been. Turtledove
uses a minimal Science Fiction contrivance to look at attitudes
to slavery, trading with a third world country and even the role
of women in the ancient and modern world.
It deals with some heavy subjects in a light and enjoyable way.
No doubt he will gain yet more fans for his adult books. A thoroughly
enjoyable read, 'Gunpowder Empire' no doubt sets up a series.
There is, after all, a lot of scope for yet more variations on
the Crosstime worlds. I look forward to the next instalment.
Sue Davies
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