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Alfred Coppel (1921–2004)

Author of Glory

71+ Works 1,129 Members 12 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

born Alfredo José de Araña-Marini y Coppel. also wrote as Robert Cham Gilman.

Series

Works by Alfred Coppel

Glory (1993) 126 copies
Thirty-Four East (1974) 96 copies
The Burning Mountain (1710) 95 copies
The Dragon (1977) 76 copies
The Apocalypse Brigade (1981) 61 copies
The Rebel of Rhada (1968) 61 copies
Glory's People (1996) 54 copies
Dark December (1960) 54 copies
Warlock Of Rhada (1985) 43 copies
Navigator Of Rhada (1969) 38 copies
The Starkahn Of Rhada (1986) 37 copies
Show Me a Hero (1987) 37 copies
The Hastings Conspiracy (1900) 36 copies
The Eighth Day of the Week (1994) 35 copies
A Land of Mirrors (1988) 25 copies
Marburg Chronicles (1985) 14 copies
The Hills of Home (2007) 13 copies
Order of Battle (1968) 10 copies
The Peacemaker (2011) 9 copies
The Invader (2010) 7 copies
Turnover Point (2010) 7 copies
Wars and Winters (1993) 6 copies
Fates Command Us (1986) 6 copies
Turning Point (2011) 6 copies
Night of Fire and Snow (1960) 5 copies
Rise With The Wind (1978) 4 copies
The Gate of Hell (1975) 4 copies
Duell der Agenten (1988) 3 copies
Double Standard 2 copies
Captain Midas 2 copies
The Starbusters 2 copies
Siste frist (1989) 2 copies
Tydore's Gift 2 copies
Hero driver (1955) 2 copies
Last Night Of Summer (1981) 2 copies
Task Of Luna 2 copies
A storm of spears (1971) 1 copy
Wreck Off Triton (2022) 1 copy
The Dreamer 1 copy
Mars Is Ours 1 copy
Apos o fim 1 copy
Runaway 1 copy
Tor zur Hölle. Roman. (1990) 1 copy
A certainty of love (1967) 1 copy

Associated Works

Galactic Empires, Volume One (1976) — Contributor — 408 copies
Galactic Empires {complete} (1976) — Contributor — 124 copies
Catastrophes! (1981) — Contributor — 89 copies
100 Astounding Little Alien Stories (1996) — Contributor — 59 copies
Best Short Shorts (1958) — Contributor — 56 copies
Planet Stories 46, January 1951 (1951) — Contributor — 8 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
de Araña-Marini y Coppel, Alfredo José, Jr.
Other names
Gilman, Robert Chan
Marin, A.C.
Galaxan, Sol
Birthdate
1921-11-09
Date of death
2004-05-30
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Oakland, California, USA
Place of death
Menlo Park, California, USA
Occupations
fighter pilot (United States Army Air Forces, WWII)
author
Disambiguation notice
born Alfredo José de Araña-Marini y Coppel. also wrote as Robert Cham Gilman.

Members

Reviews

This is a rather effective Cold War story about a race to the Moon between a Russian rocket and an Anglo-American rocket. Nice that the Brits have been included. Nice twist.
 
Flagged
datrappert | Jul 11, 2021 |
THE BURNING MOUNTAIN works as a slow moving, yet electrifying account of a projection of what would have happened in the invasion of Japan
if Hiroshima and Nagasaki had not been bombed.

It implies that Truman's final decision to drop the bombs tied into his chances for re-election.
If he did not authorize the bombing and Douglas McArthur defeated weakened Japan, as of course he would,
then Harry Truman would lose.

The book offers many perspectives and insights into both Japanese and American main characters.

What is missing is the perspective of the children, the women, and the elderly people who faced incineration or, rarely, recovery.

What is also missing is what might have happened if the United States had done nothing, had not invaded or bombed Japan to end the war.
… (more)
 
Flagged
m.belljackson | 2 other reviews | Apr 16, 2020 |
One of the ways that alternate history novels can be classified is by dividing them into two categories. The first consists of alternate history novels that are descriptions of major events told through the actions of the characters, historical or fictional. Most works of alternate history (such as those by Robert Conroy, Peter Tsouras, and the increasing majority of Harry Turtledove's novels) fit into this first category, in which the events are the focus and the characters themselves are primarily used to tell the story. The other, far less common group of alternate history novels are those in which the focus is on the characters rather than the events, with the authors of those works using the altered setting primarily as a different stage in which their characters develop in response to circumstances other than those dictated by history.

Alfred Coppel's novel is one of that minority of alternate history novels in the second category. In it, he uses the disruption of the Trinity test by a storm as a premise for the launching of the Allied invasion of Japan that was in real life rendered unnecessary by the Japanese surrender that the atomic bombs provoked. Coppel skips over Operation Olympic — the invasion of the island of Kyushu in November 1945 — to start with the much larger Operation Coronet, the invasion of the main Japanese island of Honshu, in March 1946. It is within this dramatic backdrop that his narrative unfolds, with American and Japanese characters facing the prospect of death in a titanic final clash between the two sides.

As both a longtime author and a fighter pilot during World War II, Coppel captures effectively the elements of combat within his narrative. But it is with his character development that his novel truly shines. He focuses on about a dozen main characters, using their particular experiences over a series of chapters to describe what the horrors of such an invasion may have been like. Even with his secondary characters, the space he takes to explain their background (an effort that never feels awkwardly shoehorned into the novel) pays off by imparting a real importance and poignancy to even their most mundane activities. All of them share in the stress of battle, and though his three main characters (an American Ranger who grew up in Japan, his Nisei subordinate, and their Japanese opponent who happens to be the childhood friend of the first character) seem a little too conveniently situated, overall they help convey the tragedy and insanity of the war they experience. It all makes for an alternate history novel that is far superior to most of the alternate history works turned out today, the overwhelming majority of which would be much better if they followed Coppel's example and concentrated on the people rather than the events, no matter how exciting those events may be.
… (more)
 
Flagged
MacDad | 2 other reviews | Mar 27, 2020 |

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Statistics

Works
71
Also by
20
Members
1,129
Popularity
#22,743
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
12
ISBNs
141
Languages
8

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