I loved the first book in this series, but the second outdoes itself even further! Robert G Pielke spins a masterful tale in A New Birth of Freedom: The Translator, twisting science fiction with historical fiction, but weaving it with such richness and accuracy, down to personality types, quirky characteristics, manners of speech, and reasonableness of action, that no seams or incongruities can be found. The main ideas behind this story - namely, time traveling alien invaders landing themselves in the midst of the American Civil War - are extreme enough that I haven't yet read an author who accomplished such a task with Mr Pielke's level of believability or richness of fact woven deftly into fiction. If I could make a comparison, it would be to Harry Turtledove's work, who also wrote a time-traveling science fiction tale involving the Civil War, and writes many stories in the realm of alternate fiction, but I can honestly say that I fell into Mr. Pielke's tale far more comfortably, and with far less reservations about the natural character interactions and believability of the story as it progresses.
The most outstanding aspects of this book are the historical figures who walk, talk, act, and feel like the well studied figures many of us have come to know in our history books and accounts from the time. Add to this all the troop movements and commanding officers at play, the progression of the war until our main character, Edwin Blaire, begins to alter certain outcomes for the sake of defeating this new threat, and the number of troops in each region, the numbers of guns and artillery fielded and/or available, the motivations of the leaders and the sentiments of the population - every bit of it isn't simply manufactured as so many authors have tried with this genre, but actually derived from what historians know of this period. Mr. Pielke is certainly a well learned historian, and his writing is equally polished, for which his ability to weave these difficult elements into a riveting plot has won this reader's - and this writer's - heart.
If I could choose an aspect of this work that might be considered a downside, it would be an occasionally brief moment here and there that I would like to have explored a bit further. Of course, this is a reader's preference, rather than a flaw in the work, and should be taken as such when all things are considered.
Overall, this work has earned five enthusiastic stars, and I also look forward to reading more of Robert G. Pielke's work in the very near future.
Bravo!