Eric Flint bibliography
This is complete list of works by American science fiction and historical fiction author Eric Flint.
Bibliography
Belisarius series
Written in collaboration with David Drake, the series features historical characters, including Roman general Belisarius, whom the authors present as possibly the best general to ever walk the earth.
Novels in the series include:
- An Oblique Approach (1998)
- In the Heart of Darkness (1998)
- Destiny's Shield (1999)
- Fortune's Stroke (2000)
- The Tide of Victory (2001)
- The Dance of Time (2006)
Assiti Shards universes
The Assiti Shards refers to a literary mechanism which exchanges one volume of space-time with another. This manifests as both a time-swap and place-swap for the two places affected—and more interestingly for the people occupying such real estate. The literary technique can be read about in detail in Assiti Shards effect, but when it first reached print in 1632, the technique spawned a huge surge of fan interest which is continuing to grow[1] now well over twelve years later. Flint had at least two other milieus planned utilizing the mechanism in 2000, but because of demand for works in the 1632 universe, he temporarily shelved them through the period 2001–05. They were known to be in production for some intervals in some part and manner in 2005–06, but the death of Jim Baen or other projects has apparently delayed them.
A 1632-style work titled 1781 featuring both George Washington and a Roman Legion and a more traditional science fiction work which will include Shakespeare as a character, By Any Other Name are now in the long production process at Baen Books. A book normally takes nine to twelve months after the author completes it to reach print at Baen Books. These (two known to be under contract) are inexplicably delayed and overdue by that measure. A fourth Assiti Shard effects tale, Time Spike was published in 2008.
In the late winter of 2005–06, Baen started listing all the 1632-verse books under the umbrella series title Assiti Shards series and continues to do so,[2] after previously listing them under Ring of Fire, for the only series thus far published, so 1632 (numbering 10 works in print, thirty Gazettes (XXX came out in October 2010[3]) and climbing rapidly bi-monthly) is currently listed on Baen's under the pseudo misnomer Assiti Shards series, of which there are (will be) four milieus planned, not just the original. Yet Amazon and Barnes and Noble lists "Ring of Fire" for some books in the series, and "Assiti Shards series" for others. As of early October 2007, the series name of the 1632 books is still confused; Barnes and Noble has seemingly grouped them under Ring of Fire series, Amazon and other web sellers are mixed, and the book covers of the last six hardcover releases avoid the question entirely on the dust jacket and artwork. At the moment, we use the term 1632 series, and other books in the series can be reached via that main article or by the navigation strip at the page bottom.
The 1632 series
Once also known on the internet as the 163x series, Baen for a time called the Ring of Fire series, and it is as frequently called the 1632 Universe or 1632verse; however it is named, it is a best-selling success. The alternate history series starts when the inhabitants of a small town in the United States find themselves transported back to Central Germany ... in the late spring (May) of 1631 with no way back. The first book title results because while the tale builds in 1631, the climax occurs when events in the Thirty Years' War nearly overrun the town in 1632.
- 1632, (2000) which successfully initiated the series. Primary characters and setting are in fictional Grantville, West Virginia, now part of Thuringia.
- 1633 (2002) with David Weber; co-sequel with the following Ring of Fire anthology.
- Ring of Fire (Jan 2004); first of many 1632 canonical anthologies, currently supplemented by the Grantville Gazettes. For a while the title of this work was used as the series name.
- 1634: The Galileo Affair (April 2004) with Andrew Dennis; this work takes stories from four Ring of Fire short stories and launches the second major storyline (called a 'thread' by Flint), centered on Italy.
- Grantville Gazette I print release, November 2004
- Grantville Gazette II print release, March 2006
- 1634: The Ram Rebellion (April 2006) with author-historian and key 1632 Research Committee member Virginia DeMarce. Together with stories from Ring of Fire and several Grantville Gazettes, this work takes a grassroots view at the peasants movement centered in Upper Palatinate, though it spends much time in Grantville, WV.
- 1634: The Baltic War (May 2007) with David Weber; writing schedule conflicts between Flint and Weber delayed this sequel. This novel closes out many loose ends left hanging in the Central Europe threads predecessor novel: 1633.
- 1635: The Cannon Law (October 2006) with Andrew Dennis; Sequel to 1634: The Galileo Affair
- 1634: The Bavarian Crisis (October 2007) with Virginia DeMarce
- Ring of Fire II (January 2008) anthology
- 1635: The Dreeson Incident (December 2008) with Virginia DeMarce
- 1635: The Eastern Front (October 2010) [4]
- 1635: The Papal Stakes (October 2012) with Charles E. Gannon; Sequel to 1635: The Cannon Law
- 1636: The Saxon Uprising (April 2011) [5]
- Ring of Fire III (July 2011) anthology
- 1636: The Kremlin Games (March 2013) with Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett
- 1636: The Devil's Opera (October 2013) by David Carrico; a crime story in Magdeburg
- 1636: Seas of Fortune (January 2014) by Iver Cooper; half in South America, half on the Japanese coming to the Pacific Coast of North America
- 1636: Commander Cantrell in the West Indies (June 2014) with Charles E. Gannon
- 1636: The Cardinal Virtues (July 2015) with Walter Hunt[6]
- 1637: The Volga Rule (TBA) with Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett [6]
-
- The Grantville Gazettes began as an experimental (eMagazine) collated as an anthology featuring primarily fan fiction and non-fiction background essays similar to encyclopedia articles. These fact articles, which include reference sections, were developed by the various sub-committees of the very informal 1632 Research Committee and the input (feedback and criticisms) received on the internet web-forum 1632 Tech Manual which is part of Baen's Bar. These essays and the feedback were pertinent to the developing milieu along with input from other established authors—a massive case of collaborative fiction writing—the foundation for which was in turn in part being developed on Baen's Bar by those same fans commenting, manning the committees, doing research much like contributing to a wiki, and then submitting the results to Peer review and criticism on 1632 Comments or 1632 Tech Manual. This is an ongoing process, as is the mining of said research and the primarily fan writing which is still ongoing.
- The self-funding eMagazine Gazettes were edited by Eric Flint up through issue six (VI), who along and a volunteer Editorial Board, many who have been assisting him closely in designing the development of the milieu, building and running the canonical website 1632.org and the many research topics leading to decisions within the whole collaboration. While now using his assistant and direct employee Paula Goodlett as an assistant editor, Flint retains full editorial control of the 1632 milieu and all its intellectual property rights.
- The Grantville Gazette anthologies are also published by Baen, beginning with an initial publication as a serialized eMagazine over three months, followed by an e-book release (downloadable in various electronic formats) at Webscription.net, but a mass market trade paperback edition of the first issue was published as an experiment in November 2004. The first printing sold out, and reprintings followed. The second issue was released in a Hardcover Edition in early March 2006, and also sold well. Beginning with Issue 11 the Grantville Gazette has gone pro. It did go to a bimonthly schedule starting at May 1st 2007 and pays pro rates.
- Grantville Gazette I, Issue 1 (Electronic edition Nov 2003, paper edition November 2004, both published under the title The Grantville Gazette)
- Grantville Gazette II, Issue 2 (Electronic edition Mar 2004, hardcover edition March 2006)
- Grantville Gazette III, Issue 3 (Electronic edition October 2004, hardcover edition January 2007)
- Grantville Gazette IV, Issue 4 (Electronic edition mid April 2005, hardcover edition June 2008)
- Grantville Gazette V, Issue 5 (Electronic edition August 2005, hardcover edition August 2009)
- Grantville Gazette VI, Issue 6 (Electronic edition March 2006)
- Grantville Gazette VII, Issue 7 (Electronic edition April 2006)
- Grantville Gazette VIII, Issue 8 (Electronic edition July 2006)
- Grantville Gazette IX, Issue 9 (Electronic edition September 2006)
- Grantville Gazette X, Issue 10 (Electronic edition December 2006)
- Grantville Gazette XI, Issue 11 (Electronic edition May 2007)
- Grantville Gazette XII, Issue 12 (Electronic edition July 2007)
- Grantville Gazette XIII, Issue 13 (Electronic edition September 2007)
- As of June 2014, the bimonthly schedule is still going on and the last published is Grantville Gazette 53 (Electronic edition May 2014).
Other Assiti Shards universes
Other "Assiti Shards" universes which share only the time travel mechanism, but not the setting of the 1632 universe include two novels:
- Time Spike (May 2008) with Marilyn Kosmatka.[7]
- By Any Other Name—being co-authored by Sarah Hoyt (First draft complete and his part of the writing scheduled in Oct 2007 by Eric Flint for sometime the coming year; Publication date unknown, but no earlier than very late 2008).[8]
Heirs of Alexandria series
(with Dave Freer and Mercedes Lackey) Set in an alternate "Venetian Empire" in which magic thrives. (Note, a significant amount of text, and a couple of major characters in this work are adapted from stories written by Lackey in the Merovingen Nights shared universe series. That series was started by C. J. Cherryh in her novel Angel with the Sword.)
- The Shadow of the Lion, March 2002, Baen Books, ISBN 0-7434-3523-0
- This Rough Magic, December 2003, Baen Books, ISBN 0-7434-7149-0
- A Mankind Witch, July 2005, Baen Books, ISBN 0-7434-9913-1
- Much Fall of Blood, 2010, Baen Books, ISBN 978-1-4391-3351-4
- Burdens of the Dead, 2013, Baen Books, ISBN 978-1-4516-3874-5
Jao Empire series
- The Course of Empire (2003 with K. D. Wentworth)
- The Crucible of Empire (2010 with K. D. Wentworth)
- The Span of Empire (September 2016 with David Carrico )[9]
Joe's World series
- The Philosophical Strangler (2001)
- Forward the Mage (2002 with Richard Roach)
Karres series
- The Wizard of Karres (2004 with Freer and Lackey; a sequel to Schmitz's Witches)
- The Sorceress of Karres (2010 with Dave Freer)
Pyramid series
- Pyramid Scheme (2001 with Dave Freer)
- Pyramid Power (2007 with Dave Freer)
Rats, Bats and Vats series
- Rats, Bats and Vats (2000 with Dave Freer)
- The Rats, the Bats and the Ugly (September 2004 with Dave Freer)
Boundary series
- Boundary (March 2006 with Ryk E. Spoor)
- Threshold (June 2010 with Ryk E. Spoor, sequel to Boundary)
- Portal (May 2013 with Ryk E. Spoor, second sequel to Boundary)
- Castaway Planet (February 2015 with Ryk E. Spoor, third sequel to Boundary, start of a new trilogy in the same universe)
- Castaway Odyssey (October 2016 with Ryk E. Spoor, sequel to Castaway Planet)[9]
Further collaborations
- Honor Harrington series stories/novels (with David Weber)
- Changer of Worlds (2001, anthology)
- Crown of Slaves (2003)
- Torch of Freedom (2009)
- Cauldron of Ghosts (2014)
- When Diplomacy Fails (November 2008 with Mike Resnick; anthology)
- The Gods of Sagittarius (March 2017 with Mike Resnick)[10] (might be the start of a new series)
Solo novels
- Mother of Demons (1997)
Trail of Glory series
Collections
Short fiction
- In the Honor Harrington Universe
- From the Highlands (short novel), in More than Honor #3: Changer of Worlds with David Weber 2001
- Fanatic (novella) in The Service of the Sword, 2003
- Other Stories
- The Islands (novella) in Warmasters, an anthology, 2002
- "Entropy and the Strangler" (short story), in Writers of the Future Volume IX, edited by Dave Wolverton September 1993
- "The Thief and the Roller Derby Queen" (short story), in The Chick is in the Mail, edited by Esther Friesner, 2000
- "The Truth about the Götterdämmerung" (short story), in Turn the Other Chick, edited by Esther Friesner, 2004
- Carthago Delenda Est (novella), in Foreign Legions, edited by David Drake, 2001
Classic SF reissues edited by Eric Flint
- Works of Christopher Anvil
- Pandora's Legions (2002)
- Interstellar Patrol (2003)
- Interstellar Patrol II: The Federation of Humanity (2005)
- The Trouble with Aliens (2006), collection
- The Trouble with Humans (2007), collection
- War Games (2008)
- Prescription for Chaos (2008)
- The Power of Illusion (2010)
- Works of Randall Garrett
- Lord Darcy (2002), co-edited with Guy Gordon
- Works of Tom Godwin
- The Cold Equations and Other Stories (2003)
- Works of Keith Laumer
- Retief (2002)
- Odyssey (2002)
- Keith Laumer: The Lighter Side (2002)
- Future Imperfect (2003)
- A Plague of Demons (2003)
- Legions of Space (2004)
- Imperium (2005)
- Works of Murray Leinster
- Med Ship: The Complete Stories (2002), co-edited with Guy Gordon
- Planets of Adventure (2003)
- A Logic Named Joe (2005)
- Works of Howard L. Myers
- The Creatures of Man (2003), co-edited with Guy Gordon
- A Sense of Infinity (2009), co-edited with Guy Gordon
- Works of James H. Schmitz co-edited with Guy Gordon
- Telzey Amberdon (2000)
- TnT: Telzey & Trigger Together (2000)
- Trigger & Friends (2001)
- The Hub: Dangerous Territory (2001)
- Agent of Vega & Other Stories (2001)
- The Witches of Karres (2003)
- The Eternal Frontiers (2002)
- Works of A. E. van Vogt
- Transgalactic (2006), co-edited with David Drake
References
- ↑ "Column: Salvos Against Big Brother; article: 'The Economics of Writing'". Jim Baen's Universe. October 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
One note of explanation. I'm only using the paperback royalty figures because, for our purposes here, it's the paperback figures that are critical. A book that comes out first in a hardcover edition, followed by a paperback reissue, sees an almost complete stop to hardcover sales once the paperback appears. So you can't use hardcover royalty figures to gauge a book's longevity.
line feed character inRoyalty period: Total net sales Sell-through Period Sales Dec-01 31237 85% 31237 Jun-02 31776 90% 539 Dec-02 41066 87% 9290 Jun-03 47535 87% 6469 Dec-03 54511 88% 6976 Jun-04 62306 89% 7795 Dec-04 67035 88% 4729 Jun-05 72071 88% 5036 Dec-05 77351 89% 5280 Jun-06 83437 89% 6086 Dec-06 94582 89% 8145 |quote=
at position 381 (help) - ↑ "Baen Book's online series lists for Eric Flints by series". Retrieved 2007-10-19.
- ↑ "Exploring Eric Flint's world of 1632". Grantvillegazette.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
- ↑ Amazon.com (accessed 25 July 2010)
- ↑ Amazon.com, "The Saxon Uprising" (accessed 25 July 2010)
- 1 2 Eric Flint (November 10, 2014). "Eric Flint Newsletter – 7 NOVEMBER 2014". The official home page of author Eric Flint. Eric Flint.
- ↑ "Forthcoming" at ericflint.net (accessed 26 October 2007). "May 2008 will see the publication of TIMESPIKE by Eric and Marilyn Kosmatka, a different branch of the “Assiti Shards” universe."
- ↑ "Known scheduled for writing during 2007". Retrieved 2007-10-26.
First drafts in Eric’s hands from Collaborators... By any other name (with Sarah Hoyt)
- 1 2 "Publishing Schedule". Baen Books. Archived from the original on 2016-06-25. Retrieved 2016-06-25.
- ↑ "Publishing Schedule". Baen Books. Archived from the original on 2016-10-29. Retrieved 2016-10-29.