Tags: Baen Free Library, SF
Summary
Eric Flint’s acclaimed 1634: The
Galileo Affair was a national bestseller from one of the most
talked-about voices in his field. Now, in this extraordinary
new alternate history, Flint begins a dramatic saga of the
North American continent at a dire turning point, forging its
identity and its future in the face of revolt from within, and
attack from without. In the War of 1812, U.S. troops are
battling the British on the Canadian border, even as a fierce
fight is being waged against the Creek followers of the Indian
leader Tecumseh and his brother, known as The Prophet. In
Europe, Napoleon Bonaparte’s war has become a losing
proposition, and the British are only months away from
unleashing a frightening assault on Washington itself. Fateful
choices are being made in the corridors of power and on the
American frontier. As Andrew Jackson, backed by Cherokee
warriors, leads a fierce attack on the Creek tribes, his young
republic will soon need every citizen soldier it can find.What
if–at this critical moment–bonds were forged
between men of different races and tribes? What if the Cherokee
clans were able to muster an integrated front, and the U.S.
government faced a united Indian nation bolstered by escaping
slaves, freed men of color, and even influential white allies?
Through the remarkable adventures of men who were really
there–men of mixed race, mixed emotions, and a singular
purpose–The Rivers of War carries us in this new
direction, brilliantly transforming an extraordinary chapter of
American history.With a cast of unforgettable
characters–from James Monroe and James Madison to Sam
Houston, Francis Scott Key, and Cherokee chiefs John Ross and
Major Ridge–The Rivers of War travels from the battle of
Horseshoe Bend to the battle of New Orleans, and brings every
explosive moment to life. With exquisite attention to detail,
an extraordinary grasp of history, and a storyteller’s
gift for the dramatic, Flint delivers a bold, thought-provoking
epic of enemies and allies, traitors and revolutionaries, and
illuminates who we are as a nation, how we got here, and how
history itself is made–and remade.From the Hardcover
edition.