### Amazon.com Review Harry Turtledove marches on through history with *The Great War: Walk in Hell*. In his alternate timeline, the Confederate States of America won the Civil War, aided by Britain and France. In the 1880s (**), Americans fought again after the CSA acquired parts of Mexico--and th
The Great War: Walk in Hell
โ Scribed by Harry Turtledove
- Publisher
- Del Rey;Ballantine Pub. Group
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 472 KB
- Edition
- 1st mass market pbk. ed
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The year is 1915, and the world is convulsing. Though the Confederacy has defeated its northern enemy twice, this time the United States has allied with the Kaiser. In the South, the freed slaves, fueled by Marxist rhetoric and the bitterness of a racist nation, take up the weapons of the Red rebellion. Despite these advantages, the United States remains pinned between Canada and the Confederate States of America, so the bloody conflict continues and grows. Both presidents--Theodore Roosevelt of the Union and staunch Confederate Woodrow Wilson--are stubbornly determined to lead their nations to victory, at any cost. . . Synopsis: The bitter strife between the Confederate States of America, the victors in the Civil War, and the United States continues as they take opposite sides in the growing turmoil of the First World War.
Library : General
Universes : Great War [02]
Formats : EPUB
ISBN : 9780345405623
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
An alternate-history novel on World War I in which the United States and the Confederate States are on opposite sides, the latter having won independence during the Civil War. Complicating the Confederate war effort is a socialist revolution by blacks.
This is second part of the *Great War* trilogy (after *American Front*) and the 4th volume in Harry Turtledove's epic alternative history of the USA, in which the South is victorious in the American Civil War.It began with *The Guns of the South*, continues *How Few Remain* and goes o
On the 25th August 1895, Ernest Alfred Hall was born into a pioneering Australian family that lived on a 313-acre property called 'Cloverdale' near the hamlet of Beech Forest, south of the Otway Ranges, some 200 kilometres south west of Melbourne, Victoria. As a child, it seemed he would be destined