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Darkness Descending (World at War, Book 2) Hardcover – April 8, 2000

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 17 ratings

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Now Turtledove returns to the story of a World War in a world where magic works, with this moving second volume. Algarvian soldiers corral Kaunians to send them west, towards Unkerlant, to work camps. The Kaunians left behind are worried about what the work camps might mean, but are assauged by Algarvian lies.

In Kuusamo, scholars race to find the relation between the laws of similarity and contagion. Rumors abound about the Algarvian work camps, rumors most cannot believe as true. But the mages know, for they can feel the loss of life in their very souls.

Turtledove's cast of characters takes on its own life as the reader sees the war from all sides and understands how the death and destruction benefits no one, not even the victors.
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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In recent years, Harry Turtledove has specialized in alternate-history novels in which World War II, say, is grimly complicated by the arrival of invading alien reptiloids; the fantasy sequence that started with Into the Darkness and continues with Darkness Descendingis a powerful demonstration that it is human malice, not military technology, that we have to fear. Broadly speaking, the sequence replays World War II with magical fantasy empires in place of the participants we know; there are analogies between the fiercely militarist kingdom of Algarve and the Third Reich, just as the dangerous paranoid who rules the rival empire of Unkerlant has much in common with Joseph Stalin. There is a Manhattan project making military use of the underlying rules of magic, a particularly vicious version of the Holocaust, and a large cast of vividly realized viewpoint characters--Unkerlant's principal general, an Algarvian dragon pilot, various confused civilians--caught in the wheels of history. Turtledove provides some worryingly thoughtful material here about power and its consequences; his bleak use of stock fantasy images in a developed military contex--screaming unicorns caught in firestorms--is coarse-grained but unforgettable. --Roz Kaveney, Amazon.co.uk

From Publishers Weekly

Trust Turtledove to deliver plenty of grungy military action spiked with dollops of sex and a keen and accurate depiction of the realties of warfare. The sequel to his alternate history Into the Darkness is anything but easy going. Based on the horrors of the Eastern Front, where the Soviet Red Army fought to repel the Nazi invasion, the novel suffers from Turtledove's tendency to use names of one ethnic flavor to represent analogous characters of a totally different national group. For example, the Algarvians, the militant aggressors who closely resemble Nazis, bear Italian-sounding names and fight under a red, green and white flag. Given that there are 12 nations involved in this mortal conflict, and a cast of approximately 150 characters, this gets incredibly frustrating, especially since Turtledove abruptly shifts from site to site and employs magic in place of mid-20th-century technology (dragons as fighter aircraft, leviathans as submarines). When the Algarvians round up helpless Kaunians into "victory camps" where they will eventually be slaughtered for the vital energy needed to smite the Soviet-style enemies, the Unkerlanters, these foes retaliate by massacring their own peasantry to draw more energy themselves. This barbaric ante-raising causes the civilized, British-like Lagoans to observe that everyone involved will develop ever-increasing monsterlike strength before this world war comes to an end. Turtledove personalizes the conflict through 15 "viewpoint characters"(so-called in his extensive Dramatis Personae), including the gallant Algarvian dragonflier Colonel Sabrino; the elegant, conniving Kresta; and young lovers Vanai, a hunted Kaunian, and Ealstan, a decent bookkeeper. Everyone is brought to the brink of a Pearl Harbor-like entry by a slow-to-activate world power, leaving all--including Turtledove's readers--to slog through a lot more territory in likely future installments.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Tor Books; First Edition (April 8, 2000)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 512 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0312869150
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0312869151
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.75 x 1.5 x 9.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 17 ratings

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Harry Turtledove
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Harry Turtledove is the award-winning author of the alternate-history works The Man with the Iron Heart; The Guns of the South; How Few Remain (winner of the Sidewise Award for Best Novel); the Worldwar saga: In the Balance, Tilting the Balance, Upsetting the Balance, and Striking the Balance; the Colonization books: Second Contact, Down to Earth, and Aftershocks; the Great War epics: American Front, Walk in Hell, and Breakthroughs; the American Empire novels: Blood & Iron, The Center Cannot Hold, and Victorious Opposition; and the Settling Accounts series: Return Engagement, Drive to the East, The Grapple, and In at the Death. Turtledove is married to fellow novelist Laura Frankos. They have three daughters: Alison, Rachel, and Rebecca.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
17 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2021
great price
Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2014
This is a fun read, but I would not call it great literature. Mr. Turtledove knows a lot about WWII and his books on the subject are fun and easy to read.
Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2010
HArry Turtledove is a master of his craft. Keeping so many personalities alive and in constant motion, thru a story encompassing SIX VOLUMES (!!!) is more than impressive.
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2015
I love Harry Turtledove
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2007
And that's because his writing style has become very old and boring. Sure, the first few turtledove books you read are very fun and good, but as you read more and more of his books you will come to realize that he really isn't as great a writer as you thought he was. As I struggled to finish this book I kept getting annoyed at how the characters all say things in almost the exact same way. Everyone talks the same, whether they be Unkerlanter, Algarvian, or Jelgavan, it doesn't make a hell lot of difference. The way everyone speaks, if not the exact words they use, are all the same.

Algarve (Germany) has invaded the enormous kingdom of Unkerlant (Russia) and is on its way to taking Cottbus, the capital, when the horrid Unkerlant winter slows the Algarve war machine down and then forces the invaders back. The Unkerlantsrs have learned that by using snow shoes on their Behemoths (giant rhino like creatures that act like tanks) they can achieve greater mobility than their Algarvian counterparts. Because of this, now Unkerlant has its first real hope of the whole war.

Turtledove does a great job, as usual, of portraying the war and the hardships the soldiers go though, but fails miserably when it comes to the civilians and those left on the home front. He tries to be ambitions and have a lot of dramatic stories going at the same time without realizing that the more ambitious he tries to be with every character, the less ambitious be ends up being with EVERY character. For instance, he tries to go for a heartbreaking drama with one character being forced to give away her body to an occupying soldier in order to keep her grandpa alive, but the way he writes it you'd think this was no big deal. Turtledove is very good at writing about war, but when it comes to drama he is so absurdly bad it's not even worth talking about. He is unable to gain any sort of sympathy for his characters, which is a shame because he had a lot of potential in this story.

People new to Turtledove will be enchanted by the worlds he creates and his unique style of writing, but the more of his books you read the more you realize he really isn't that great of a writer, certainly not up to par with some of the great writers we have today. He tries hard to improve; I can tell he does, but he doesn't seem able to do it. If you read this review, please leave a comment.

Re-read value; very low.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2000
Screaming "Heil Mezentio" the Algarvian master racestorms into the lands of Unted Tyranny of king Swemmel. Like in 1942the invaders are stopped just short of the capital and aim to strikefor the south (Kaukasus in our world) in order to cut off fuel from the Ru.. err Unkerlanters. Well, no surprises there, right? Algarvians make all the same mistakes that Germans made, and it will cost them dearly in the next book ;-]. Stil, the book is good. Even though I know the global trends, the particulars are always surprising and enticing. The dragons of Luftwaffe clashing with underfed Unkerlanter Air Force, or a Sibian sub commander... but no spoilers for you. Trust me on this one: the book beats the first one. Bottom line: If you have read the first one and did not burn it after reading, get the second one. If you haven't, look at my review for "Into The Darkness" and if you think you want to buy the first book, get "Darkness Descending" while you're at it.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2000
Turtledove is using what he understands of WWII to recreate the fighting in a land where magic prevails and the lands involved are differently named. Nevertheless, the countries are, for the most part, easy to identify. Algarve is Germany, Unkerlant is Russia, Forthweg is Poland, the Duchy of Bari is the Rhineland...these are easy to figure, and their fates are easy to predict and analogize. I'm not so sure where Britain fits into this nor am I exactly clear on whether Valmiera or Jelgava is France, but it matters little since the main game is played out between Unkerlant and its Stalin-like King Swemmel and King Mezentio (Hitler) and his blitzkrieging armies of Algarve. Gyongyos may or may not be Italy (I can't really be sure) and in a climatic turnaround, I think Zuwayza is Finland, since it certainly falls in historically with the bahvior of the people of that country. The U-S may be the Land of the Ice People altho' that remains to be seen, and Japan's equivalent may not show up at all. The main difficulty I have with Turtledove developed in his THE GREAT WAR series and appears again in this book -- there are too many characters to keep track of and unlike the GREAT WAR series, in this case, their names are almost unpronounceable and certainly not memorable. Also, the first book ended so abruptly, I thought I'd lost the last two or three pages somehow. There was no indication of a sequel or of an ending. Very confusing. Since we are all aware of how WWII went and how it ended, I can only hope that Turtledove has something in store for us that differs from history, otherwise there is little point in finishing the series.
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