![]() In How Few Remain, Turtledove allows the generals of the North and the South to fight the trench warfare of World War I, albeit in a Louisville, Kentucky (destroyed as thoroughly as Turtledove had destroyed Chicago in the "Worldwar" series) rather than on the fields of France and Belgium. ![]() It has been said that generals begin each war by fighting the previous war. Similarly, Turtledove drops hints about the Democratic Party's agenda which are not in line with what that party has become in our own world. The 1880's, Republican Party Lincoln is a member of is more akin to the modern Democratic party than the party of Newt Gingrich and Bob Dole. In fact, Turtledove's portrayal of the Republican party as an whole will seem odd to anyone without some knowledge of American political party history. Similarly, Turtledove's use of Abraham Lincoln's authentic speeches give the former president the sound of realism, although the politics he espouses may surprise many people. Samuel Clemens sounds very realistic and Mark Twain's voice keeps peeping through despite the fact that Turtledove wrote his entire part. For the most part, Turtledove handles his cast well. This method also makes it easier for Turtledove to avoid portraying his world in simplistic black and white terms, as too much speculative fiction still does. This broad cast of characters allows Turtledove to present several different viewpoints of the situation and add depth to the world he has created without seeming to give any single individual an unreasonably open or broad mind. Custer, Alfred von Schlieffen, Frederick Douglass and Stonewall Jackson. For his viewpoint characters, Turtledove makes use of Abe Lincoln, Sam Clemens, J.E.B. As is typical of Turtledove's alternate history novels, How Few Remain sports a large cast of historical characters. Even as his characters are convinced that the United States are stronger than the Confederate States, the reader becomes convinced they are wrong. The Confederate States' major weakness seems to be their continued reliance on slave labor, which may affect their relationship with allied nations England and France. Although they may have a small population base, they have more and greater allies than the United States. Although Turtledove attempts to portray the United States as a stronger country than the Confederate States, he consistently demonstrates that the Confederate States are in a stronger position. Fortunately, this sort of dialogue mostly disappears after Turtledove defines the situation in the first fifty pages. Although the War of Succession was a major turning point for both countries, all the characters seem fixated on the events of the war, as if a modern person would refer to the Viet Nam war in nearly every conversation. Unfortunately, Turtledove has his characters spending way too much time going over their recent history to make their conversations seem real. Much of the opening of the novel is spent explaining the details of this new world. Unlike our world in which Lee's Special Orders 191 were lost, these orders remained secret until put into effect permitting the Confederacy to claim their independance. Set in a divided North America in 1881, the Confederate States have been a separate country since Lee's victory in 1862. Although it is set in the same universe as the upcoming series, it is a prelude to it and can be read, according to Turtledove, as a stand-alone novel, or in anticipation of the series. ![]() Similarly, How Few Remain has been linked to Turtledove's forthcoming "The Great War" series. This speculation was fueled by an erroneous entry in Books-in-Print which listed the title of the book as Guns of the West. Because it has an alternate Civil War as its background, many have speculated it is a sequel to his earlier Guns of the South. There seems to have been a lot of confusion surrounding Harry Turtledove's novel, How Few Remain. HOW FEW REMAIN by Harry Turtledove Del Rey 1-9 480pp/$25.00/October 1997 ![]()
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