Ring of Fire (anthology)

Ring of Fire
Ring of Fire cover art with backdrop of an armored coal truck.
AuthorEric Flint (ed.)
and various others
Cover artistDru Blair
LanguageEnglish
Series1632 series
or Ring of Fire
SubjectAnthology, fiction
in a shared universe setting
GenreAlternate history, science fiction
PublisherBaen Books
Publication date
January 1, 2004
Publication placeUnited States
Media typeHardcover
Pages528 pages; 1.6 lb,
Physical Description:
6.6"x9.7"x1.6"
ISBN0-7434-7175-X (2004 hardcover)
ISBN 1-4165-0908-9 (2005 paperback)
OCLC53145277
813/.0876608 22
LC ClassPS648.F3 R55 2004
Preceded by1633 (novel)
(Written in parallel, with crossed plot lines) 
Followed by1634: The Galileo Affair (novel) or in time
The Grantville Gazette (more anthologies, November–2004) 
Physical Description: 6.6"x9.7"x1.6"; 528 pages; 1.6 lb Edition Info: Physical Description:
6.6"x9.7"x1.6"; Hardcover; 2004-01-01

Ring of Fire is the third published book by editor-author-historian Eric Flint of the 1632 series, an alternate history series begun in the novel 1632 (February 2000).[1] The Ring of Fire is both descriptive of the cosmic event as experienced by the series' characters, but also is at times used as the name for the series itself. The series is set in war-torn Europe during the middle of the Thirty Years' War.

Ring of Fire is a collection of short stories —half by a variety of established science fiction authors invited into the setting, half fan-fiction by enthusiasts who helped take the stand-alone novel into a series numbering works in the tens of books; all set in the universe initially created by Flint's science fiction novel 1632 written as a stand-alone novel and turned into a series by popular demand. Unlike most short works in a novel created series, the stories within are important milieu shaping creations—story threads which are formalized into the series canon for they helped establish it, and act as a spring board for further developments in the books. Many characters debut in these short stories who play an important role in subsequent longer works.