Belisarius I Thunder at Dawn Review
Belisarius
I Thunder at Dawn review by Harriet Klausner
"An Oblique Approach". Byzantium Emperor Justinian selected his Thracian
bodyguard to lead his army. On the way to assume his command role, Monk Michael
of Macedonia and Bishop Anthony Cassian meet with him. They give him a crystal
that he grasps; he sees Northern India's Malwa Empire conquering the world,
leaving a path of destruction and death no one could envision. He and trusted
allies begin a top secret project to insure his vision of the future never
occurs even as he begins rebuilding the army at Daras. However they lack solid
Intel about their future foe; or they would know something beyond human
understanding is guiding the deadly treacherous Malwa.
"In the Heart of Darkness". In India seeking intelligence on the enemy and
assisted by the futuristic Aide though that intelligence makes little sense to
the Byzantium general, Belisarius meets with Lord Venandakatra insisting he will
switch sides for the right price. However, he also sets up a ploy to liberate
Princess Shakuntala, the last survivor of the Satavahana dynasty over run by the
Malwa. He tries to hide his duplicity; he succeeds until he meets his archenemy
Link the future supercomputer who possesses the body of a Malwa. Realizing Link
can "read" him; Belisarus and his comrades are forced to flee.
These two reprints are the opening acts of the Belisarius alternate history saga
as two opposing groups from the future intervene in Justinian’s “present” era.
The tales are well written especially the first fascinating one. However, “In
the Heart of Darkness” is a mixed bag as readers fully grasp the differences
between the methodologies employed by the futurists with their respective
intervention, but the era does not come alive as much as it should (as the plot
especially early does in “An Oblique Approach”). Still sub-genre fans will enjoy
this reprint of a fine saga that blends real historical fifth century persona
with fictional intruders from the future.
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