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The Great War: American Front [Anglais] [Relié]

Harry Turtledove


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Description de l'ouvrage

juin 1998
When the Great War engulfed Europe in 1914, the United States and the Confederate States of America, bitter enemies for five decades, entered the fray on opposite sides: the United States aligned with the newly strong Germany, while the Confederacy joined forces with their longtime allies, Britain and France. But it soon became clear to both sides that this fight would be different--that war itself would never be the same again. For this was to be a protracted, global conflict waged with new and chillingly efficient innovations--the machine gun, the airplane, poison gas, and trench warfare.

Across the Americas, the fighting raged like wildfire on multiple and far-flung fronts. As President Theodore Roosevelt rallied the diverse ethnic groups of the northern states--Irish and Italians, Mormons and Jews--Confederate President Woodrow Wilson struggled to hold together a Confederacy still beset by ignorance, prejudice, and class divisions. And as the war thundered on, southern blacks, oppressed for generations, found themselves fatefully drawn into a climactic confrontation . . .
--Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Poche .

Descriptions du produit

Extrait

George Enos was gutting haddock on the noisome deck of the steam trawler Ripple when Fred Butcher, the first mate, sang out, "Smoke off the starboard bow!" That gave George an excuse to pull the latest fish off the deck, gut it, toss it down into the icy, brine-smelling hold, and then straighten up and see what sort of ship was approaching.

His back made little popping noises as he came out of this stoop. I'm getting too old for this line of work, he thought, though he was only twenty-eight. He rubbed at his brown mustache with a leather-gloved hand. A fish scale scratched his cheek. The sweat running down his face in the late June heat made the little cut sting.

He followed Butcher's pointing finger with his eyes. "A lot of smoke," he said, whistling low. "That's not just another Georges Bank fishing boat, or a tramp freighter, either." His Boston accent swallowed the r's in the final syllables of the last two words. "Liner, I'd guess, or maybe a warship."

"I think you're right," Butcher said. He was little and skinny and quick and clever, his face seamed by wind and sun and spray till he looked to have ten more years than the forty-five or so he really carried. His mustache was salt and pepper, about evenly mixed. Like Enos, he grew it thick and waxed the ends so they pointed toward his eyes. Half the men in the United States who wore mustaches modeled them after the one gracing Kaiser Wilhelm's upper lip.

Captain Patrick O'Donnell came out of the cabin and pressed a spyglass to his right eye. "Warship, sure enough," he said, his Boston mixed with a trace of a brogue. "Four-stacker--German armored cruiser, unless I'm wrong."

"If you say it, Captain, we'll take it to the bank," Fred Butcher answered. That wasn't apple-polishing. O'Donnell had spent years in the U.S. Navy, rising to chief petty officer, before he retired and went into business for himself. He'd seen German warships at a lot closer than spyglass range; he'd exercised alongside them, out in the middle of the Atlantic, and maybe in the Pacific, too.

"She's going to pass close to us," Enos said. He could see the great gray hull of the ship now, almost bow-on to the Ripple. The plume of black coal smoke trailed away behind.

Captain O'Donnell still had the telescope aimed at the approaching ship. "Imperial German Navy, sure enough," he said. "I can make out the ensign. Now--is that the Roon or the Yorck?" He kept looking, and finally grunted in satisfaction. "The Yorck, and no mistaking her. See how her cranes are pierced? If she were the Roon, they'd be solid."

"If you say so, Captain. You're the one with the spyglass, after all." Enos' chuckle suited his wry sense of humor. He took another naked-eye look at the oncoming Yorck. The cruiser was nearly bow-on. When he spoke again, he sounded anxious: "We see her, Captain, but does she see us?"

The question was anything but idle. As the Yorck drew near, she seemed more and more like an armored cliff bearing down on the steam trawler. The Ripple was 114 feet long and displaced 244 gross tons. That made her one of the bigger fishing boats operating out of Boston harbor. All at once, though, Enos felt as if he were in a rowboat, and a pint-sized rowboat at that.

"How big is she, Captain?" Fred Butcher asked. The huge hull and great gun turrets gave him pause, too.

"At the waterline, 403 feet, 3 inches," O'Donnell answered with the automatic accuracy of the longtime Navy man he was. "She displaces 9,050 tons. Four 8.2-inch guns, ten 6-inchers, crew of 557. Four-inch armor amidships, two-inch belts at the ends. She'll make twenty-one knots in a sprint."

"If she runs us down, she won't even notice, in other words," Enos said.

"That's about right, George," O'Donnell answered easily. He took pride in the strength and speed of naval vessels, as if having served on them somehow magically gave him strength and speed as well. Even so, though, his glance flicked to the American flag rippling atop the foremast. The sight of the thirty-four-star banner rippling in the brisk breeze must have reassured him. "They'll see us just fine. Here, if you're still worried, I'll send up a flare, that I will." He dug a cigar out of his jacket pocket, scraped a match against the sole of his boot, and puffed out a cloud almost as malodorous as the coal smoke issuing from the Yorck's stacks.

As if his cigar had been a message to the German cruiser, signal flags sprouted from her yards. O'Donnell raised the telescope to his eye once more. The cigar in his mouth jerked sharply upward, a sure sign of good humor. "By Jesus, they want to know if we have fish to sell!" he burst out. He turned to Butcher. "Tell 'em yes, and don't waste a second doing it."

The affirmative pennant went up almost as quickly as the order had been given. The Yorck slowed in the water, drifting to a stop about a quarter-mile from the Ripple. Then everyone aboard the steam trawler whooped with delight as the German cruiser let down a boat. "Hot damn!" yelled Lucas Phelps, one of the men minding the trawl the Ripple had been dragging along the shallow bottom of Georges Bank. "The Germans, they'll pay us better'n the Bay State Fishing Company ever would."

"And it all goes into our pockets, too," Fred Butcher said gleefully. On fish that made it back to Boston, the crew and the company that owned the boat split the take down the middle. Butcher went on, "We're light five hundred, a thousand pounds of haddock, that's not ever gonna get noticed."

The happy silence of conspiracy settled over the Ripple. --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Poche .

Revue de presse

"The definitive alternate history saga of its time."
--Booklist (starred review)

"THIS IS STATE-OF-THE-ART ALTERNATE HISTORY,
NOTHING LESS."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Harry Turtledove has established himself as the grand master of the alternative history form."
--Poul Anderson

"Harry Turtledove is, quite simply, the best . . . and he is getting even better."
--S. M. Stirling
   Author of Island in the Sea of Time --Ce texte fait référence à l'édition Poche .

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Amazon.com: 3.8 étoiles sur 5  132 commentaires
13 internautes sur 15 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
2.0 étoiles sur 5 A warning 23 mars 2001
Par Un client - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Poche
OK, this isn't a review so much as a warning, and it'll probably get lost among 100+ reviews, but just be aware what you're getting yourself into. This was originally going to be a four-book series but now it's SIX (two trilogies, not counting the somewhat interrelated HOW FEW REMAIN prequel).

Browse the reviews for the third and fourth (when it's out) books in the series and see if you still think it's worth your time. Like many HT series, THE GREAT WAR gets off to a great start and then quickly turns tedious and repetitive. I gave up after three books; I have better things to do with my life than slog through this stuff.

15 internautes sur 18 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Excellant Alternate History. 14 janvier 2000
Par Michael J. Berquist - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
Harry Turtledove is probably the acknowledged master of alternate history fiction today. His "Guns of the South" is a classic of the genre and more recently he has turned his attention towards an interesting alternate time-line: what would the First World War have been like if the South had won the Civil War? The answer is "The Great War: American Front", as exciting and interesting a book as I have ever read.

In Turtledove's scenario, the South won the Civil War, then emerged victorious in the Second Mexican War, which saw a humbled US lose to the combined power of the CS and England. As the Great War begins, the United States is allied with Germany (and presumably Austria-Hungary, though this is not mentioned) while the Confederate States are allied with the triple powers- England, France and Russia (with Japan thrown in for good measure).

Historically, the addition of the US to the German/Austrian side would have dramatically tilted the balance of power against the triple powers. Not only would they have been deprived of American armies which contributed to the winning of the war against Germany, but England must now also contend with the American invasion of Canada and the presence of the American navy on the high seas. Indeed, it was American soldiers who helped to save the beleaguered armies of England and France in the pivotal days of 1918, when the German army came perilously close to capturing Paris and perhaps winning the war.

The events of "The Great War: American Front" are quite plausible as well. Slaves in the CS, whose position is quite like that of the serfs of Russia in 1914, take to reading Marx. The US must quell a Mormon uprising in Utah. Poison gas is used to break the stalemate in Kentucky . . . all events that are quite plausible and dramatically told in Turtledove's excellent prose. The First World War was the great upheavel of Europe's old political and social order. The effect in America might have been similar. The reader must give Turtledove kudos for taking the might-have-beens of the story and making them feel like they did actually happen.

As good as Turtledove's work is, "The Great War: American Front" has some weaknesses. For one, there are far too many characters. Do we really need two different perspectives on the U.S. occupation of Canada? Do we really need so many looks at the war in the trenches? Sometimes characters tend to blend together, or they take time away from another whose story you may want to follow more closely. Also, this reader would have enjoyed longer looks at the naval aspects of this war. Historically, Theodore Roosevelt's interest in naval affairs was such to suggest that the U.S. Navy in 1914 would have been a formidable fighting force, quite the equal of the Royal Navy. The peeks at the naval dimensions of the war Turtledove grants his readers are too slight for my taste.

This reader would also enjoy a longer look at the political implications of the war. The US has a two-party system divided between the Democrats and Socialists. I would love to see how Turtledove might portray this at work. CSA President Woodrow Wilson and USA President Theodore Roosevelt make little more than cameo appearances, leaving the reader to wonder what the decision-making process of the two respective governments is actually like.

On the balance: a magnificent book. I can hardly wait to find out what happens next.

4 internautes sur 4 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
4.0 étoiles sur 5 Americans fight a grim World War 1 - on American soil 15 août 2000
Par m.p.t.dezaire@kub.nl - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Poche
This is the kind of alternate history (or (science) fiction in general) I really like. Sense of wonder: what would have happened if the South had won the American Civil War? And: would they have been allies or even neutral during WW1 - or each others enemies? Suspension of disbelief: given that, and the fact that WW1 really took place, I had no trouble 'believing' the events that took place in American Front.

The story: 32 years after the USA lost (and the CSA won) the second war between the states, World War 1 starts in Europe, just like it did in reality. But since the Confederacy has been allies with Britain and France now for more than half a century, and the Union does have sort of een ally in Imperial Germany, they both plunge into the conflict and start fighting each other for the third time - a 'classic' WW1 fight.

Unfortunately, I read this book before I read Harry Turtledove's How Few Remain, a sort of sequel to the series. A couple of things in American Front then became more clear to me.

Like in How Few Remain, there is not really a side I am more inclined to feel sympathy for. Both the USA as the CSA treat negroes with contempt. This is not very unlikely, since in our own 1960s, there was still a sort of an 'apartheid' in America! Of course I feel more sympathy for the USA, since they did not have slavery (nor did the CSA after 1882); but the trouble in my eyes is, is that the USA just should have let the new CSA go after 1862 - slavery probably would have ended no later than 1900 or so. There would have been no feelings of hatred or wounded pride. And: the USA should have swallowed their pride in 1881 - just let the CSA have those two Mexican provinces. And when WW1 starts, the USA can remain neutral, the CSA can join the Allies, and WW1 can end much sooner.

But in this universe, the North/USA have gone to war with the South/CSA several times and they lost every time. They can do nothing else but to fight them a third time.

I'm almost afraid which side will win - because if the Allies lose, Canada will 'only' lose some territory, hopefully not too much; but the CSA will most likely simply cease to exist, and the US occupation will be much more grim than a post-1865-style occupation. And think of the disastrous things that will happen in Europe, if Germany wins there. If on the other hand the USA loses, it will (again) lose 'only' some territory, but it will be even more inclined to have feelings of revenge and retaliation. You have to remember: by 1914, the hearts and the feelings of both the USA and the CSA are now those of two separate countries. Maybe the best solution is: the Germans lose in Europe, the USA wins in America???

I want to know how this dreadful war ends and I'm going to read the entire series. It is a magnificent book. There are some flaws, like (in my eyes) not enough maps of the different fronts and events, but on the whole I would recommend The Great War: American Front to everybody who likes to read alternate history.

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