Rating:  Summary: American United Against England? Review: Stars & Stripes Forever is the first novel in a trilogy about a Civil War that didn't quite happen. In our timeline, on November 8, 1861, the USS San Jacinto, an Union warship, stopped the Trent, a packet ship flying British colors, in the Bahama Channel and took off two Confederate diplomats, John Slidell and William Murray Mason. Since the packet ship belonged to a neutral power and the boarding occurred on the high seas or, in some views, within British colonial waters, the US warship had committed an act of war. The British public responded with a great outcry and the Queen and her ministers were infuriated. Prince Albert, however, persuaded the Queen to moderate their response and a firm, but not inflammatory, note was immediately passed to the US government and eventually the two diplomats were released.In this novel, Prince Albert tries to calm his wife but is too ill to be effective; in fact, he passes out and has to be carried to his bed. Thus, the note generated from this meeting is markedly different in tone from that of our timeline. The note is hand carried to the US Secretary of State, Sewart, with a request for an immediate answer. The US Cabinet, however, is divided on the response, but agrees to have the ambassador to Great Britain, Charles Adams, meet with Lord Palmerston to negotiate a compromise settlement. However, the British are not in the mood for compromise; Lord Palmerston has already considered withholding military supplies from the Union and is sending additional troops to Canada. Then there is a firefight between Canadian whiskey smugglers and a customs patrol that is reported to England as an invasion of Canadan territory. The British issue an ultimatum: seven days to return the Confederate prisoners and apologize for the invasion or there will be war. When the British invade from Canada, they are met by New York militia, who take heavy casualties. Additional British troops under the command of the Duke of Cambridge, Commander-in Chief of the British Army and the Queen's cousin, have been sent to the Gulf of Mexico in an attempt to take Deer Island, a Union bastion offshore from Mississippi, but miss their landing in the fog and instead attack a Confederate installation in Biloxi. Learning of the mistake, the Duke continues to push the attack in order to meet up with the Canadian invasion force, thereby splitting the country. Under intense pressure from the British, CSA General Beauregard requests an armistice from General William T. Sherman and instead is given a temporary alliance against a common enemy. Word of the unexpected attack and this cooperative response galvanizes both the North and South, leading to a ceasefire and talks of reunion. Moreover, General McClellan is hospitalized with a fever and Lincoln seizes the chance to relieve him as General of the Armies; he appoints General Sherman as his replacement. Due to his actions in Biloxi, the CSA agrees that Sherman will also be Commanding General of the Joint Armies of the Union and the Confederacy. In the meantime, a tragic fall from his horse sends a paralyzed General Ripley, Chief of Ordnance, to the hospital. His aide, General Ramsey, is chosen as his replacement and immediately initiates changes to modernize Army weapons, starting with replacement of the standard rifle with breechloaders and equipping marksmen units with the Sharps rifle. The spirit of innovation also pervades the Naval Department, leading to orders for more of Ericcson's iron ships and for Parrott's interrupted screw breechloader cannons. Formerly a mostly rural society, this new war causes an infant military-industrial complex to stretch its muscles and produce new weapons and tactics. The Civil War was never as popular in the Union as America's previous wars. There were many opponents of the War who were shouted down by the vocal proponents and even imprisoned for their protests. A civil war just didn't sit well with many people and too many families were split down the middle. A war with England, however, would have been rather popular in the North, particularly after so many English ships were blockade runners. The South had a warmer attitude toward England, mostly due to these blockade runners, but still had differences of opinions, especially about the British Navy backed embargo against the shipment of slaves from Africa. The current British government irritated both North and South with its arrogance assumptions of superiority. Another war with England would probably be much more popular in the Confederacy than the ongoing Civil War. The permanent reunion of these two American nations, however, would depend on a stronger commitment to resolving their disagreements. The new spirit of cooperation can only strengthen that possibility, yet many differences must still be overcome. This book sticks close to the actual history, both in events and in the personalities. The fictional events, moreover, are much like actual events that occurred elsewhere; for example, the British mistakes in the Gulf reflect actual problems in their other wars in that century. The navigation of that time, particularly in open boats during foggy weather, was generally much less than precise and British troops of that era were frequently undisciplined in victory. The critical reviews of this story, on the other hand, often are achronistic in viewpoint, reflecting present day standards and capablilities. The major criticism that can be made of this series is that the author selects among those possibilities that will support his story line. The author almost certainly started with a specific conclusion and then followed the possibilities backwards to the point of divergence. This practice is much like reverse engineering and is used even among working scientists. Maybe the probabilities are slim and maybe not, but it is nevertheless a legitimate strategy for plotting a work of fiction. It is the practice of "What if" and who can say that these events could never have happened. ...P>Recommended for Harrison fans and anyone who enjoys well-crafted tales of alternate wars.
Rating:  Summary: November 8, 1861 could of changed many things... Review: Harry Harrison starts out with a interesting idea. What if Prince Albert was dead when a U.S. warship stopped a British ship and seized two Confederate emissaries on their way to England? In our history Prince Albert was able to defuse the crisis. But what if Queen Victoria responded like the rest of England with outrage and declared war on the U.S. of A? Things become A LOT more interesting. Soon Lincoln and the North finds itself fighting both the South and an English invasion from Canada. That, in itself would of made for an interesting novel. But Harrison can't let it go at that. Right when you think the North might lose with too many fronts to fight on the British Navy invades the WRONG city. Instead of saying, "OOps, sorry, you Yanks all look alike." it decides to continue to fight BOTH sides. Of course, the North and the South join up together and the tide turns again. BESIDES the fact that I don't picture the British Navy landing troops on the wrong coast, I don't believe that either the British navy nor the British army would be so easy to defeat. I also don't see the British officers as being so stupid. True, it would of been a costly battle for the British, with the USA and CSA having more local ironclades to defend their coast, more Americans would of joined the army on both sides and the defenders would have shorter supply lines, but still it would not have been so easy. I'm not saying the Americans would not win, bit it would of taken longer and frankly, I still don't think the British would of attacked the South by accident. They HAVE maps. Also the book shows British troops as looters and murders. Which they were, but they were also DAMN tough fighters!
Rating:  Summary: forever at a loss Review: This novel is a turkey. Though I find it very plausable that the arrogance of Britain would cause the British to declare war on the United States after the forced removal of two southerners from a British ship (Chesapeak vs Leopard in reverse). And I do see the chance of a minor border incident leading to conflic. Just as I am extremely impressed by the Authjor's description of HMS Warrior. And certainly, the North would have clobbered any British invasion by shere weight of numbers, and then invaded Canada. However, I honestly doubt that the South would join arms with the North after a little friendly fire incident. The Southern elite having gone to such efforts to bring Britian and France into their side of the war. Would Washington have joined forces with Clinton if the French ahd accidentally attacked him? Would Eisenhower join arms witht the Germans if the Soviets had attacked him under similar circumstances? No where in history has such an in conflict change of sides taken place. This story defies both history and human nature, if it were to happen for real. And where is France? Britain's ally. Napoleon III had eyes on Mexico. I can write a better novel than this.
Rating:  Summary: The most original alternate Civil War history I've read Review: The main problem with Civil War alternate histories is that they usually find a way for the Confederacy to win; I already own two books like that, and they're written by the same author. Harrison found a way to deviate from that with a small, seemingly insignificant event from the Civil War--in this case, Price Albert dying before he could talk Queen Victoria out of retaliating after a US Navy ship took two Confederate ambassadors off a British ship--and result in a totally different outcome other than CSA endurance. While my own studies of the history of the British Empire in college made it easy to accept that the Brits' decision to take on both the Union and the Confederacy after mistaking the Stars & Bars over Mississippi for the Stars & Stripes over Maryland (an opinion of Harrison's possibly exacerbated by his living in Ireland), I had never known before that the combined forces of the Union and Confederacy were more than a match for the standing military of any European nation at the time. Light-hearted or not, accurate or otherwise, it's a good book.
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