You’re in command of a U.S. Navy nuclear-powered
supercarrier packed with advanced jet fighters, missiles and the latest in command-and-control
systems. All of the sudden, there’s a strange electrical disturbance, a vortex opens and you’re
thrown back in time decades to the eve of a great battle that will decide
America’s fate.
What do you do?
Stop me right there if you
think you’ve seen this one
before. You’d be right. That’s how the film
The
Final Countdown (1980) begins with the
USS
Nimitz thrust back in time to
eve of the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor in
1941.
|
An F-14 dines on a Japanese Zero in The Final Countdown. |
So you can imagine my misgivings the first time I fell across
the initial book in John Birmingham’s superior
Axis of Time trilogy,
Weapons of Choice, where the fusion-powered
U.S. Navy
supercarrier USS Hilary Clinton
(Hey, it could still happen!) is thrown back in time from 2021, along with a
multinational fleet of similarly advanced ships with their weapons and crews to the
eve of the Battle of Midway in 1942.
The alone almost earned the book the distinction of winning
an airborne trip across my living room. But, fortunately, I stayed with the
book and
was quickly rewarded. Where in
The Final
Countdown, the heroes are yanked suddenly back through time through a
cheap-ass
deus ex machina plot device that saves the timeline just as they were about to take on the
Japanese and change history; the protagonists
in Birmingham’s book are under no such compunction and set about merrily changing the course of
history in big juicy ways with their advanced technology.
But the bad news is some of that same technology has also
fallen into the hands of the Axis and the Soviet Union.
The commander of the time travelers is Admiral Phillip
Kolhammer. Kolhammer has the unenviable task of fighting a reinvigorated Axis,
all the while keeping his own 21st Century forces together and working
with his contemporary allies of 1942, some of whom would just as soon take all
of the technology and use it for their own gains. Kolhammer is also battling
racial and moral attitudes of time. Here I think Birmingham benefits from
hindsight a little too much and may be a bit hard on the Allies; they were, as
he seems to forget, men – and women – of their time.
In the next two books of the series – Designated Targets, Final Impact – we see some of consequences of - intended and not – of Kolhammer’s
tampering with the timeline. Birmingham shines here with some very good
speculative writing, trying to guess at the sort of strategic, technological
and social changes that might be wrought by the mass landing of a bunch of
technologically advanced time travelers in a less advanced era. By the end of
the last book, with a cloud hanging over us, we are left wanting for more.
Birmingham is supposed to be work on a new novel in the
series, so I will be happy to read it once it comes out.
I definitely recommend this series if you like military alternate
history. All three books in the series are available in paperback your local bookstore or online.
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