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Pages in category "Russian alternate history novels" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. D. Day of the Oprichnik
In an alternative history, Africa became a unified empire and invaded, occupied and colonised Europe instead of Europe colonising Africa. At the time of the series, slavery had been abolished for some time, but segregation, similar to the Jim Crow Laws , continues to operate to keep the "Crosses" (dark-skinned people) in control of the "noughts ...
Pages in category "Russian alternate history" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Atom RPG;
Also: Russia: People: By occupation: Historical fiction writers / Speculative fiction writers: Alternate history writers Pages in category "Russian alternate history writers" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Kirill Yeskov bases his novel on the premise that the Tolkien account is a "history written by the victors". [2] [3] Mordor is home to an "amazing city of alchemists and poets, mechanics and astronomers, philosophers and physicians, the heart of the only civilization in Middle-earth to bet on rational knowledge and bravely pitch its barely adolescent technology against ancient magic", posing a ...
In 2004 at the Moscow International Book Fair, Anatoly Fomenko with his coauthor Gleb Nosovsky were awarded for their books on "new chronology" the anti-prize called "Abzatz" (literally 'paragraph', a Russian slang word meaning 'disaster' or 'fiasco') in the category "Pochotnaya bezgramota" (the term is a pun upon "Pochotnaya gramota ...
History suggests that the year is Summer of 1987 as the book begins. Most of the plot follows a mixed-raced man named Gregori Grogorievich. A decorated but disgraced Imperial Russian Army Major, Gregori has left the military for a maritime life in Southeastern Alaska and has a sport fishing boat which he uses for charters and occasional smuggling.
The Russian Stories, also known as the Russian Series, the Russian Trilogy and the Rusalka Trilogy, are a series of fantasy novels by science fiction and fantasy author C. J. Cherryh. The stories are set in medieval Russia along the Dnieper river, [ 1 ] in a fictional alternate history of Kievan Rus' , a predecessor state of modern-day Russia ...