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1636: The Devil's Opera

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2013 novel by David Carrico and Eric Flint
1636: The Devil's Opera
AuthorEric Flint and David Carrico
Cover artistTom Kidd
LanguageEnglish
Series1632 series
GenreAlternate History
/Science fiction
PublisherBaen Books
Publication date
October 1, 2013
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages528 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-4516-3928-5 (hardback)
OCLC 830352082

1636: The Devil's Opera is a stand-alone novel in the alternative history 1632 series with minor character overlaps.[1] Published on October 1, 2013 the book is written by David Carrico and Eric Flint. It is a semi-detective novel set in a growing industrial city that is a continuation of two series of stories that David Carrico had originally written in the electronic versions of the Grantville Gazette that were serialized[2] over several issues and later compiled into the compilation 1635: Music and Murder, one series involving criminal investigation and crime fighting and other series involving music and social revolution.

The novel starts with the discovery of a body floating in a river by a new character, but things are not as simple as they first appear to be since more unsolved crimes begin to occur. Later, detectives Byron Chieske and Gotthilf Hoch of the recently formed Magdeburg Police, formerly the city watch, are called in to investigate. These two characters were first introduced in the story "None So Blind" that was published in the tenth issue of the Grantville Gazette. Some of the criminals involved in this novel were also developed in these serials.

The other main storyline involves musician Marla Linder and her husband Franz Sylwester and how they used music to motivate the common people to resist the conservative forces that were trying to take over and return the world to medieval way of doing things after the emperor was incapacitated during battle. These two characters were first introduced in the story "The Sound of Music" that was published in the third issue of the Grantville Gazette.

Literary significance and reception

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The reviewer for Booklist wrote that the book is "Another engaging alternate history from a master of the genre."[3] However, he does warn readers that "familiarity with previous stories is, if not essential, at least strongly recommended." The reviewer for SFRevu wrote "This is a later book in a well-established world and is not the best entry point."[4] Mark Lardas of the Galveston Daily News called it "an old-style police-procedural mystery, set in 17th century Germany."[5] Two separate reviews were published in the Midwest Book Review. One reviewer called the book "a powerful and fast-paced story"[6] while the other called it "an engaging for the most part low key tale".[7] The Fistful of Wits reviewer admired "the pacing and denouement" of the novel.[8]

1636: The Devil's Opera barely missed getting listed on the Locus (magazine) Hardcovers Bestsellers List in 2014, but did well enough to be labeled as a runner-up.[9]

References

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  1. ^ "Uchronia: The Assiti Shards (1632) Series". www.uchronia.net.
  2. ^ Carrico, David (December 13, 2011). "Bibliography". David Carrico Fiction.
  3. ^ Pitt, David (October 1, 2013). "1636: The Devil's Opera". Booklist . Vol. 110, no. 3. p. 43. ISSN 0006-7385. Archived from the original on May 25, 2014. Alternate Link via EBSCO (institutional library access)
  4. ^ Lawhorn, Bill (October 1, 2013). "1636: The Devil's Opera (Ring of Fire)". SFRevu.
  5. ^ Lardas, Mark (October 20, 2013). "'Devil's Opera' is strong addition to fun series" . Galveston Daily News .
  6. ^ "The Bookwatch". Midwest Book Review . Vol. 8, no. 12. December 2013.
  7. ^ "MBR Bookwatch". Midwest Book Review . Vol. 12, no. 12. December 2013.
  8. ^ White, Henry (September 23, 2013). "1636: The Devil's Opera, by David Carrico and Eric Flint". Fistful of Wits.
  9. ^ "Locus Bestsellers, January 2014". Locus . January 2014.
[edit ]
1632 series
Main series
novels
South European
thread
Russian thread
India thread
  • 1636: Mission to the Mughals (2017)
  • 1637: The Peacock Throne (2021)
Stand-alone
novels
Anthologies
and melded novels
Ring of Fire Press
novels

(full publication list)
  • Joseph Hanauer (2013)
  • No Ship for Tranquebar (2013)
  • Second Chance Bird (2013)
  • Turn Your Radio On (2013)
  • Essen Steel (2013) (was The Essen Chronicles)
  • The Danish Scheme (2013) (was Northwest Passage)
  • Bartley's Man (2016)
  • The Muse of Music (2017)
  • Love and Chemistry (2017) (was The Undergraduate)
  • 1635: The Battle for Newfoundland (2018)
  • Essen Defiant (2018)
  • The Monster Society (2018)
  • Letters From Gronow (2018)
  • The Persistence of Dreams (2018)
  • The Hunt for The Red Cardinal (2018)
  • The Chrysanthemum, the Cross, and the Dragon (2018)
  • The Legions of Pestilence (2019)
  • The Legend of Jimmy Dick (2019)
  • Up-time Pride and Down-time Prejudice (2019)
  • The Trouble with Huguenots (2019)
  • A Red Son Rises in the West (2019)
  • Magdeburg Noir (2020)
  • A Holmes For the Czar (2020)
  • Fire on the Rio Grande (2020)
  • A Red Son: Not Without Honor (2020)
  • Tales From the Mermaid and Tiger: Engines of Change (2020)
  • Things Could Be Worse: The Pastor Kastenmayer Stories (2020)
  • Two Cases for the Czar (2020)
  • Designed to Fail (2020)
  • The Grantville Inquisitor (2021)
  • A Matter of Security (2021)
  • A Mission for the Czar (2021)
  • Missions of Security (2021)
  • Saving The Dodo (2021)
  • The Horsewoman (2021)
  • Mrs. Flannery's Flowers (2021)
  • Security Threats (2021)
  • A 1632 Christmas (2021)
  • The Gourmets of Grantville (2021)
  • The Marshals (2022)
  • The Unexpected Sales Reps (2022)
  • I Want to Be Your Hero (2022)
  • The Private Casefiles of Archie Gottesfreund (2022)
Huff & Goodlett Press
  • A Diogenes Club for the Czar (2023)
Grantville Gazettes
and other magazines
Related lists
Time Spike series
Queen of the Seas
series
Crossing series
Peterbilt series


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