Grantville Gazette IV

The Grantville Gazette IV is the sixth collaborative mixed-work set in the "1632verse". It is part of the The Grantville Gazettes series. This gazette was the last book purchased by Jim Baen from Eric Flint,. This volume appeared when publication schedules were far less regular and the Gazette website didn't exist. It appeared online as the Baen E-ARC/e-zine April 1, 2005, and did not reach print publication until its hardcover release June 1, 2008.

"Anatomy Lesson"
A former princess wants to be a nurse, so uptime nurse Anne Jefferson arranges an autopsy to dissuade her. Rembrandt chooses to create a new and different version of his famous Anatomy Lesson painting which he had not yet created in this new timeline, and the siege of Amsterdam is settled with some disconcerting consequences to the power of high-status citizens who fled.
 * by Eric Flint

"Poor Little Rich Girls"
In the financial storyline begun in "The Sewing Circle" in the anthology Grantville Gazette I and "Other People’s Money" in the anthology Grantville Gazette III, the "Barbie Consortium" of preteen girls became rich by selling their exotic dolls to downtimers. In a stock market panic, they pretend ignorance while buying stock that adults are dumping on them as worthless, and make even more money. However, one of their self-made victims vows revenge. The girls must also educate their elders as to current financial realities, such as why paying off a mortgage is a bad idea.
 * by Paula Goodlett and Gorg Huff

"Magdeburg Marines"
The reborn U.S. Marine Corps moves to Magdeburg to provide Navy security and recruit trainees. They acquire downtime officers and meet the King.
 * by Jose Clavell

"Elizabeth"
How can you supply an army without foraging off your own people? A mixed group of Germans and West Virginians led by a Cajun try to find a way. A narrow-gauge railroad is proposed, intending to supply Gustav's troops using lawn tractor engines. The first of the TacRail stories.
 * by Ernest Lutz and John Zeek

"One Man’s Junk"
A master carpenter gives a blackballed journeyman blacksmith a new chance, making bolts and nuts that are critically needed by Grantvillers, but considered by downtime master smithers to be beneath their dignity.
 * by Karen Bergstrahl

"The Class of ’34"
The tragic accidental deaths of several high school graduates poignantly remind Grantville of their fragile existence.
 * by Kerryn Offord

"’Til We Meet Again"
After a nasty service garage accident leaves her a widow, an up-time music teacher breaks away from her old life and joins the faculty of new women's college in Quedlinburg to influence noble down-time girls.
 * by Virginia DeMarce

"Chip’s Christmas Gift"
After being dumped by markswoman and national heroine Julie Sims, Chip finds a welcome with a downtime family, especially from his schoolfriend's sister.
 * by Russ Rittgers

"Dice’s Drawings"
An American retiree is bitter from the manual labor required to stay alive after losing his hard-earned uptime pension. He has lovingly kept treasured relics of his previous life as a printer. A downtime woman helps him realize that a new life is possible.
 * by Dan Robinson

"Heavy Metal Music"
This continues a serial begun in "The Sound of Music" in the Grantville Gazette III. Friends of crippled violist Franz Sylwester come to Grantville to check on him and find out about the new uptime music. Uptimer Marla Linder becomes the group's instructor. They have serious reservations about being taught by a woman, but are fascinated by the potential of the newfangled Piano technology and possibilities. Another sub-theme is the realization that because of the Butterfly effect, many great composers may never exist, and much music in Europe may never be written. The group vows to preserve this future-past heritage for the paradoxical neohistorical world.
 * or "Revolution in Three Flats"
 * by David Carrico

Non-Fiction

 * Fact Essays from 1632 Research Committee members:

"Drillers In Doublets"

 * by Iver P. Cooper

"How To Keep Your Old John Deere Plowing"

 * ... "Diesel Fuel Alternatives For Grantville 1631-1639"
 * by Allen W. McDonnell

"How to build a Machine gun in 1634"
Two alternate views by the Grantville firearms roundtable:
 * "with available technology"
 * First alternative by Leonard Hollar, Tom Van Natta and John Zeek
 * Second alternative by Bob Hollingsworth

"A Looming Challenge"
This essay deals with man-power requirements of a technological society that is tied to the land by animal powered agriculture. A major challenge is the mass production of cloth, since spinning thread and weaving cloth demand a large percentage of the labor force in the Europe of the day. (The sewing of clothes has been affected by the new-fangled sewing machines introduced in "The Sewing Circle" story in the anthology Grantville Gazette I.) Research describes how hard it would be for the up-timers, who are far removed from the clothing industries strongholds in the north and south, to successfully overcome the hurdles and develop the key inventions needed.
 * by Pam Poggiani