Author Archives: Andrew

Second Front: The Allied Invasion of Europe 1942-43

Second Front: The Allied Invasion of Europe 1942-43Second Front: The Allied Invasion of Europe 1942-43 by Alexander M. Grace
Published by Casemate Publishers on 2014
Genres: Type I - Hard
Pages: 288
Format: eBook
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four-stars

Premise – Point of Divergence (POD)

The Allies invade Europe via the coast of southern France in 1942

The Story

One of the great arguments of World War II took place among Allied military leaders over when and where to launch a second front against Germany in Europe. Stalin, holding on by his teeth in Russia, urged a major invasion from the west as soon as possible. The Americans, led by Marshall and Wedemeyer, argued likewise. It was Churchill who got his way, however, with his Mediterranean strategy, including a campaign on the Italian peninsula, which he mistakenly called the “soft underbelly of Europe.”

This realistic, fact-based work posits what would have happened had Churchill been overruled, and that rather than invading North Africa in the fall of 1942, then Sicily and Italy, the Allies had hit the coast of southern France instead. The key element that enables the alternative scenario is the cooperation of Vichy, which was negotiated at the time but refused. If the Allies had promised sufficient force to support the French, however, the entire southern coastline of France would have been undefended against a surprise invasion.

In this book, once the Allied armies are ashore, Germans stream toward the front, albeit through a gauntlet of Maquis, Allied paratroopers, and airpower. Meantime the Allied forces push up the Rhône Valley and titanic armored clashes take place near Lyons. Already in desperate straits at Stalingrad, where they had committed their air and armored reserves, the Germans had also yet to switch to a full total-war economy, with tanks like the Panther and Tiger not yet deployed.

The Review

The first two thirds of the book was definitely edging into a 5 but as the story moved further away from the initial landing it became increasingly difficult to suspend my sense of disbelief at where the author was pushing the story to. What I did enjoy was how the author used real persons doing the same sort of the same thing they were famous for but at a different time, or in different place. And the re-imagining of ‘the Battle of the Bulge’ was quite entertaining. This is definitely a book I’ll be reading again, although probably not for a couple of years.

four-stars

Sealion

SealionSealion by Richard Cox
Published by Futura on 1974
Genres: Type I - Hard
Pages: 188
Format: Paperback
four-half-stars

Premise - Point of Divergence (POD)

Hitler invades England Sep 22 1940

The Story

The German paratroops jumped at dawn as they had done in Holland, in Belgium, in Norway. But this time there were more of them ... the time was six o'clock on the morning of September 22, 1940 ... by breakfast time close on 90,000 troops were successfully ashore on the beaches between Folkestone and Seaford.

Operation Sealion: the German invasions of England. Minutely planned. What would have happened if the invasion had gone ahead as planned?

Hitler had intended to capture the whole of Southern England within only ten days. Sealion is a vivid, authentic documentary novel based on a War Game organised by the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, umpired by six top British and German officers in an effort to determine whether Hitler would have succeeded.

The Review

This is a professionally written book by a former Defence correspondent for the Daily Telegraph and it shows. It is also a book that I have reread on at least three occasions. Its research is exemplary, and the style is free flowing and easy to read. Don’t expect much in the way of characterisation though, it isn’t that sort of book. It will grab your attention though, and keep you interested until the end.

four-half-stars

Gunpowder God

Gunpowder GodGunpoweder God by H. Beam Piper
Series: Paratime
Published by Sphere on 1978
Genres: Type III - Soft
Pages: 189
Format: Paperback
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five-stars
Series Rating: five-stars

First Published as: "Lord Kalvan of Otherwhen" 1965

Premise - Point of Divergence (POD)

Aryan-Transpacific line (Aryans move east rather than west, eventually settling the Americas)

The Story

The Paratime Police patrolled the vast number of alternate time-dimensions, the worlds which had branched off at every crucial point in history. Their job was to keep the existence of the alternate Earths a secret. And to keep them from mixing and destroying each other.

But even the Time cops could make mistakes. They made a big one when Calvin Morrison, an apparently ordinary State Trooper from the Fourth Level, Europo-American / Hispano-Columbian subsector was accidently switched through the dimensions into the Aryan-Transpacific sector, Styphon's House subsector.

In a mere few week, Morrison was being hailed as Lord Kalvin. Even worse, he was masterminding a local war that could blow the whole Paratime secret sky-high.

The Review

OK – I have to admit that this is one of my favourite books of all-time, and I must have read it at least ten times over the past 20 years. But what else do you need in a book other than:

  • a pretty, intelligent, and unattached princess;
  • a hero whose skills are not terribly useful on his own line, but who finds himself ideally suited for the new line he gets dumped into;
  • a fight worth fighting against the House of Styphon; and
  • a well set out alternate history.

As Verkan Vall tells the Chief of the Paratime Police on his return from investigating Kalvan Morrison’s accidental transfer to the Styphon subsector timeline:

“Look what he has, on his new time-time, that is old one could never have given him. He’s a great nobleman: they’ve gone out of fashion on Europo-American, where the Common Man is the ideal. He’s going to marry a beautiful princess, and they’ve even gone out of fashion for children’s fairy-tales. He’s a sword-winging soldier of fortune, and they’ve vanished from a nuclear-weapons world. He’s commanding a good little army, and making a better one of it, the work he loves. And he has a cause worth fighting for and an enemy worth beating.”

The only problem is that the book is no longer in print!

five-stars