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Settling Accounts Return Engagement: Book One of the Settling Accounts Trilogy [Hardcover]

Harry Turtledove
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Aug 2004 Settling Accounts Trilogy (Book 1)
Harry Turtledove’s remarkable alternative history novels brilliantly remind us of how fragile the thread of time can be, and offer us a world of “what if.” Drawing on a magnificent cast of characters that includes soldiers, generals, lovers, spies, and demagogues, Turtledove returns to an epic tale that only he could tell–the story of a North American continent, separated into two bitterly opposed nations, that stands on the verge of exploding once again.

In 1914 they called it The Great War, and few could imagine anything worse. For nearly three decades a peace forged in blood and fatigue has held sway in North America. Now, Japan dominates the Pacific, the Russian Tsar rules Alaska, and England, under Winston Churchill, chafes for a return to its former glory. But behind the façade of world order, America is a bomb waiting to go off. Jake Featherston, the megalomaniacal leader of the Confederate States of America, is just the man to light the fuse.

In the White House in Philadelphia, Socialist President Al Smith is a living symbol of hope for a nation that has been through the fires of war and the flood tides of depression. In the South, Featherston and his ruling Freedom Party have put down a Negro rebellion with a bloody fist and have interned them in concentration camps. Now they are determined to crush their Northern neighbor at any cost.

Featherston’s planes attack Philadelphia without warning. The U.S.A. lashes back blindly at Charleston. And a terrible second coming is at hand. When the CSA blitzkrieg is launched, the U.S.A. is caught flat-footed. Before long, the gray Army reaches Lake Erie. But in its wake the war machine is spinning a vortex of destruction, betrayal, and fury that no one, not even Jake Featherston himself, can control.

Now, President Smith faces a Herculean task, while an obscure assistant secretary of war named Roosevelt rises in his ranks. For the U.S.A., the darkest days still lay ahead. Across the globe, a new era of war has just begun. And in the hands of the incomparable Harry Turtledove, readers are treated to a masterful vision of what might have been. An enduring portrait of history, nations, and human nature in its many manifestations, Return Engagement is a monumental journey into the second half of the twentieth century.

Product details

  • Hardcover: 640 pages
  • Publisher: Del Rey Books (Aug 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345457234
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345457233
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 17.2 x 4.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,065,057 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I'm glad I got that off my chest. I have been anxiously awaiting the continuation of Harry Turtledove's alternate history series between the USA and the Confederacy since I finished The Victorious Opposition, mainly because that book was so bad and because I wanted to see how Turtledove did once he got back on a war footing. I'm very happy to say that the improvement is so noticeable that it shines. Yes, there are problems and annoyances, but for once they do not overshadow everything else. This is the best book in the series since World War I ended.

I'll get the main gripes out of the way first, because for the first time in this series, and for the second book in a row, I am going to praise Turtledove. As with all the rest of the books in this series, the main criticism is the prose and dialogue. Turtledove has an annoying habit of not only repeating character traits (more about that below), but also words and phrases used in narration. Three times in the first 150 pages, there is a variation of somebody telling a dark joke or comment and everybody laughing because "laughing is better than screaming," or something to that effect. All three of them are in the same context too. The city the character inhabits is being bombed and they are down in the shelter. It's an understandable reaction, but it brings the narrative to a screeching halt every time he uses it. It occurs a few more times later in the book, though it's not as obvious. Also, the style of the writing is very plain and almost "down-home" simplistic most of the time. There are a lot of "I'd love to tell you you're wrong, but you're right" type comments made from one character to another. The dialogue is stilted and so is the narrative voice. It does make the book a quick read, however.

The second obvious problem is, as is always the case with Turtledove, character repetition. I think every scene that contains Sam Carsten, a sailor for the United States, mentions how susceptible he is to sunburn. That's the most blatant thing, but each character has a trait or two that keeps coming up every time the narrative comes back to that person. We hear in quite a few Jefferson Pinkard (the camp commander mentioned above) scenes that every time the phone rings, it brings trouble from Richmond. Some have claimed that the constant introduction of characters is to help keep them straight, but that is even less of a problem in Return Engagement than it is in Turtledove's other books, as the character count is quite low in this one.

Thankfully, there are many pluses that outweigh these faults. He has cleared away most of the dead character weight. The annoying Nellie Jacobs is long gone, and her grandson isn't anywhere near as dull as she was. He doesn't even introduce that many new characters to take their places, resulting in a much tighter story with a few different viewpoints. Each character is there to give us a facet of the ongoing conflict.

Having jettisoned the boring people, we have a nice mix of older and newer characters. The most interesting has to be Sam Carsten (which makes it all the more annoying that he has the most repetition), who we have followed since the first book of the Great War, six books ago. He has come a long way, working his way up from an enlisted soldier to the position he earns here. He's straightforward, always intelligent and willing to speak his mind, and he's quite humble as well. He's just a joy to read about (skin conditions not withstanding).

There is another reason why this book is so much better than the last three. It's extremely tight and focused. All of the action regards the war in one way or another. The characters' motivations are not scattered all over the map, allowing their boring sides to come out. Also, the entire book takes just over 6 months, unlike the long years that each of the last three books encompassed. Thus, events in one character' story can actually affect some of the other characters. There isn't the isolation or the sense of events being glossed over that really turned me off before. Also, the atmosphere that Turtledove presents is almost palpable. He captures the horrors of living under a constant bombing very well (though, again, he does kill the mood a little bit by repeating it much too often).

One other thing can either be a plus or a minus. At the beginning of the book, Turtledove kills off one of his longstanding characters in a rather perfunctory fashion. Personally, I loved it, for a couple of reasons. First, it shows that he's not afraid to kill somebody off, even somebody who many people might have loved. Who is safe when the author is willing to do that? It adds to the sense of danger. Secondly, I didn't really care for the character, and I wasn't looking forward to three more books with the character doing the same thing that has been done for six books now.

Settling Accounts: Return Engagement shows that Turtledove is a much better writer when he involves military matters. While the prose is still annoying, he more than makes up for it with this outing. If you gave up on the series because of the lackluster American Empire segment, come back. While all is not forgiven, you can stop holding your nose for a while.

David Roy

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Seconds Out - Round Two Begins! 15 Dec 2004
Format:Hardcover
Back in Harry Turtledove's alternate history where the South had gained it's independence.
After the first world war had left the South and it's allies defeated Jake Featherstone had come to power in the CSA and was determined that next time round would not go the same way.
Like most of Turtledove's books we get a number of points of view characters. some are old friends fnom the earlier books and other newer characters. Again much of the action takes place within the North American continent but we get an all too brief look at what's going on in europe. Turtledove, in the virtually complete disregard both sides show to the fate of the South's black population, has managed to come up with a vision even more horrifying than the Nazi death camps.
There is also some nice commentary on how the CSA is dependent on Featherstone's personal abilities whilst the North holds to a more collectavist system.
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Amazon.com: 3.6 out of 5 stars  67 reviews
36 of 42 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars I'm an addict and I need help! 10 Jan 2005
By Robert D. Merkamp - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Ok, I've read much of Harry Turtledove's books and short stories and he shows he's got talent. But this is ... well, let's try boring. Why?

1. Characters. He seems to want to say the same things about the same characters each time. Ok, Mary Pomeroy is an angry terrorist bomber. Chester Martin's wife doesn't think the war matters to her or her husband. Sam Carsten is always focused on his sunburn. The Mexican gentleman always thinks whatever the leaders say makes sense to him. At least he isn't going on and on anymore (like in the other series) that General Dowling is really fat! Do we need a rehashed and flat description of the cahacter each time we read of them? Are they all so one-dimensional? This isn't a movie, it's the 7th book of the series, there's time to flesh these people out.

2. Can we at least have ONE good argument? There are so many times in this book where Character A says one thing, Character B makes a contrary point and we read something like this, "Character A couldn't say that he liked what he was hearing from Character B but couldn't say he was wrong either." C'mon, someone please tell the other character they were wrong, just once, no one is this agreeable!

3. I get the feeling he picked up a WW2 history book, kept the basic events and changed out some names and locations. We have Stukas, we have war breaking out June 22, 1941, we have a CSA preesident modeled on Hitler whose long on fight and short on imagination, we have the US fooling around with hush-hush radioactive stuff in Eastern Washington, we have death camps for blacks and a final solution, it goes on and on. I can accept that there would be a war between these two fictional powers but let's extrapolate, let's create something new and novel here.

I've seen Harry Turtledove do better, much better. I've seen it in many books but it isn't in this one. Perhaps that's inevitable. A series is not a good forum to showcase talent as things generally get stale over time and I wonder if it's gets boring to write after awhile.

So why am I buying these books? I think I'm addicted, I have after all read all the others of the series and it's hard not to break away now. I am starting to get better though, I got this from a Christmas gift and if I do read the others it'll probably be from the library.
39 of 46 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars My love/hate relationship with this series 28 Sep 2004
By Balto Reader - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
First of all, I really like the plot of this series of books by Harry Turtledove. He is very imaginative in fashioning the alternative history following a Confederate victory in the Civil War. I also like his plot device of showing all events through the eyes of a large and diverse cast of characters.

But... BUT... the author continues to annoy the heck out of me with his tendency to repeat, repeat, and repeat again the characteristics and motivations of each of the characters. Ditto factual elements, such as the streets and sidewalks in black neighborhoods being in bad shape. It's as if he thinks we have forgotten what we read 50 pages previously. His editor should have clued him in a long time ago that this was not only unnecessary, but also a turn-off for readers. I would guess that over 95% of the people reading this book have read at least some of the previous books as well. We already know (to pick one of the most obvious examples) that Sam Carsten gets sunburned easily. It's probably been mentioned 60 times since Carsten's character arrived in the series. Mention these things ONCE per book, please!

Another annoyance: a character will make a rather mundane and obvious observation about the war -- such as a comment about the enemy's strategy -- and other characters will act like he's a military genius for thinking of something so profound. I don't know why that bothers me, but it does.

I notice I'm not the only one bothered by Mr. Turtledove's stylistic quirts. I hope he will read the reviews here on Amazon and give them serious consideration as he writes the next two books (which I'll certainly devour in any case). He did, indeed, seem to respond to criticism that the sex scenes in an earlier book were an embarrassingly bad idea, since he hasn't repeated the mistake in recent books of the series.

A few requests for the author:
- I really am interested in learning what's happening in the rest of the world. Please provide more than just the smallest of crumbs.
- How about a Mormon character that we can follow?
- How about a Confederate enlisted man?

Despite the annoyances, I love the books. And this one was among the best of the series so far.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Rooting for Rommel 26 April 2005
By David T. Gay - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
If you never thought you'd admire a Nazi war hero, this series gives you the chance to do so without betraying your Yankee sensibilities. The leading US commander, Irving Morrell, is a thinly disguised Erwin Rommel, the Desert Fox who famously frustrated the British in North Africa from 1941 to 1943. Ever since American Front, he's been one of the most vibrant and interesting characters, though he faded in importance in the Depression era depicted in the last three novels. Finally, in Return Engagement, he receives the accolades and rank that are his due, as well as earning the grudging and potentially lethal admiration of his enemies.

Though a welcome up-pacing from the American Empire novels, this book still stalls the inevitable sacrifices and clashes that made the real WW II such a hellish nightmare. Turtledove increasingly impels action with the sweep of history rather than with the actions of the characters, making some of the civilians - Scipio, Chester Martin, Hipolito Rodriguez - more like peripherals than players. The author just isn't getting much mileage out of these characters at this point; he's keeping them along with the hint that possibly they will become central later. Add to this his habit of repeating trivial details using the exact words in every book, and sometimes more than once in each book, and sections of this multi-thousand page series work better than prescription drugs for putting the reader to sleep.

Ultimately, you don't read this series for the brilliant writing, depth of character, vivid descriptions, or even the originality of the plot. None of those things are here any longer, at least not as brightly as they were promised in How Few Remain. This series continues to offer an imaginative view of an alternate universe, and the author's exploration of how the people in that unreal place answer questions much akin to those that faced us or our ancestors is what keeps us reading this series.
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