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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 1632_(novel)1632 (novel) - Wikipedia

    1632 (2000) is an alternate history novel by American author Eric Flint, the initial novel in the best-selling [1] series of the same name. [2] The flagship novel kicked off a collaborative writing effort that has involved hundreds of contributors and dozens of authors. The premise involves a small American town of three thousand, sent back to ...

  2. In short, news of the death of this IP have been greatly exaggerated. Since late summer 2023, barely a year after Eric’s death, new material has been coming out at least every other month! Ring of Fire Press Novels. In addition to their normal workload, Baen also agreed to take on many of the Ring of Fire Press novels and re-release them.

  3. Riverdale, New York, April 9, 2024 — Eric Flint’s Ring of Fire is the best-selling alternate history series of all time. When the small, 20th Century town of Grantville, West Virginia, is hurled through time and space to Europe during the 17th Century, the course of history is forever altered. And with the publication of Eric Flint’s ...

  4. Home » Membership Area. Thanks for subscribing to Eric Flint’s 1632 & Beyond! This is where you will find the online extras available to all our subscribers. Most of this is not downloadable content, although we do have plans to add some downloadable and searchable pdfs of older (out of copyright) books we think may interest you, our ...

  5. Wormhole Press was short-listed to release Tracking and re-release Emergence as both paperbacks and in hardcover, but by October 2010 the publisher appeared to be out of business. After the novel being out of print and hard to find for over a decade, Palmer made arrangements with Eric Flint's Ring of Fire Press in 2018 to have his works reprinted.

  6. Book 1. 1632. by Eric Flint. 4.05 · 12,792 Ratings · 946 Reviews · published 2000 · 30 editions. FREEDOM AND JUSTICE -- AMERICAN STYLE 1632 And in …. Want to Read.

  7. I don't think he was paying for it, but I think he did cut his personal profits out to boost the budget: no royalties or IP costs. I don't really want to speculate, but it sounds like 1632, Inc and Ring of Fire Press couldn't work out a licensing deal with Baen and it was such a marginal profit to begin with (a subsidiary of a single setting in a niche field of science fiction) that there wasn ...