Helpful Score: 3
Unicorns, wizards, flying carpets... and Robert E. Lee? Harry Turtledove turns the American Civil War on its head with Sentry Peak, the first in a trilogy of a fantasy world engaged in a civil war. The rural northern lords, wearing blue, secede when King Avram is elected to the throne. The shopkeepers and storeclerks of the south array themselves in gray and the war commences. Along the way, the blonde haired blue eyed serfs to the northrons( as they are called) live under the shadow of tyranny and opression.
Turtledove makes this fun, almost tongue in cheek the whole time. Characters and places have similar names to their real life counterparts, or plays on words. For example, Nonesuch stands in for Richmond, Georgia is Peachtree Province, and James Longstreet is Earl James of Broadpath. Not bad, but definitly not a serious read either.
Turtledove makes this fun, almost tongue in cheek the whole time. Characters and places have similar names to their real life counterparts, or plays on words. For example, Nonesuch stands in for Richmond, Georgia is Peachtree Province, and James Longstreet is Earl James of Broadpath. Not bad, but definitly not a serious read either.
Well written alternate history based loosely on the American Civil War but fought with crossbows and pikes. Even though the story is well written, it leaves the reader somewhat disinterested because of the lack of reality in it. Not up to par with some of his other works like "Guns Of The South".