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==Literary comment==
 
This is not the first Turtledove world where [[Islam]] outpaced [[Christianity]] in [[Europe]]. In "[[Islands in the Sea]]", the [[point of divergence]] is an Islamic military thrust in 717. As the entire story takes place in 769, the long term effects remain only broadly implied. In ''[[In High Places]]'', the break-point is an upsurge in the [[Great Black Deaths]] in 1348. Both ''Through Darkest Europe'' and ''In High Places'' see a 21st century where Islam straddles Christendom, and contain significant posthumous references to the philosophers [[Al-Ghazzali]] and [[Thomas Aquinas]]. However, ''In High Places'' sees civilization held back to a medieval level, while the Islamic world of ''Through Darkest Europe'' is thoroughly modern by the standards of [[OTL]].
 
 
A vaguely similar theme of [[Middle East]]ern geopolitical reversal is found in "[[Occupation Duty]]". In that story, the OTL [[Palestinian]] land is the nation of [[Philistinia]] which broadly resembles OTL [[Israel]], and the land of OTL Israel is held by the [[Moabites]], who serve as a stand-in for the OTL Palestinians. However, a crucial effect of the story's POD is that the Abrahamic religions were nipped in the bud, and the modern world remains dominated by varied strains of polytheism.
 
 
[[Category:2018 Works]]
 
[[Category:2018 Works]]
 
[[Category:Alternate History]]
 
[[Category:Alternate History]]

Revision as of 21:16, 8 August 2018

Through Darkest Europe  
ThroughDarkestEurope
Genre(s) Alternate history
Publisher Tor
Publication date September 18, 2018

Through Darkest Europe is a stand-alone alternate history novel by Harry Turtledove, scheduled for publication on September 18, 2018. It was originally announced under the working title of God Wills It!. The novel is set in the present in a world where Christian Europe remained a backwater of religious fanaticism, but the Muslim world of the Middle East and North Africa became the progressive and developed "First World". More information may be found here.

This article is a stub because the work is not yet published.