What a charming addition to the 'ol Ring of Fire (RoF) series, the first in a spate of new releases coming over the next few months. Jody Lynn Nye adds her first full-length contribution to the series with this novel about Margery de Beauchamp, the daughter of northern English wool-maker gentry who happens to be in London asking for tax leniency right at the same time the American Embassy is shut up in the Tower of London. Driven by curiosity more than anything, she ends up visiting the Americans and making friends there, even helping (in her small way) in their escape from King Charles and his despotic right hand, Lord Boyle. Fast forward a bit and to help her family escape looming bankruptcy, Margery takes a trip to the United States of Europe (USE) to visit her uptimer friends and see if they can help her find a way to give her family's failing business a boost. She comes up with the idea to combine aqualators (water-driven mechanical computers) with looms to create sophisticated woolen weaves far beyond anything their rivals could create. To achieve this, she enlists the help of a high school computer whiz to design and program the system. With his and his father's aid, the de Beauchamps set about trying to revolutionize the wool industry while facing opposition from the guilds, some of their employees, and, of course, the insidious Lord Boyle's minions (as he's still looking for a scapegoat to blame the Tower of London explosion/American Embassy's escape on). Much like David Carrico's stories in the RoF universe, this is much more "slice of life" than "clash of civilizations" with fairly mild stakes, and I'm cool with that, the writing flows nicely, the characters are likeable, and it's easy to get invested in Margery's one-woman crusade to try to save the midlands wool industry from getting crushed by its distance from the USE's industrial revolution (which is lowering costs and increasing efficiency for continental wool farmers while Britain remains mired in an essentially medieval tech base, meaning British wool is more expensive and no longer qualitatively that much better) and by King Charles's (and by Charles, I mean Boyle, who is essentially dictator of Britain) increasingly dysfunctional policies, which are aimed at (1) satiating the King's paranoia and (2) acquiring as much wealthy and power for Boyle as he can squirrel away. Anyway, I really enjoyed this read, I do wonder if this is the first RoF novel in which the Michael Stearns parts weren't written by Eric Flint (as they just read a little different, Eric is credited, but Tom Clancy gets credited for all his posthumous books and I'm pretty sure he never even conceived of their plots, and I have no idea when Ms Nye started on this (much less finished it) but it's been 2.5 years since Eric's death, so...). All in all, my only real problem with this was that the author kept acting like Hamburg wasn't part of the USE even though she mentions Admiral Simpson's Baltic offensive has happened and thus should be under USE control. Not a big deal, just a little nitpick. Other than that very minor issue, if the Ring of Fire series can keep going with more books like this, I'll happily keep reading them.