cricket wrote:However, I don't recognize "Tsar Wars" or "Natas"...
Sorry, another couple of George Griffith's works, although he didn't refer to them as Tsar Wars himself. Bit early for that play on words, y'know? You can get the skinny here:
http://www.heliograph.com/buy.shtml
Basically, "Natas" is the head of a terrorist-but-in-a-good-way(?) organization devoted to stopping war and overthrowing all the tyrannies of the Earth (especially Tsarist Russia, who Natas has a personal beef with), which they accomplish mostly by lucking out and running into the dead-broke inventor of the world's first viable airship engine as he's thinking about killing himself. They proceed to build a small fleet of airships and intervene selectively in the sort-of-worldwide war that breaks out shortly thereafter.
Angel of the Revolution ends with the world at the feet of the triumphant Aerians, who found a Utopian society in the mountains of Africa after destroying the ability of other governments to wage war and saving Britain from a Franco-Russian invasion complete with subs and war zeps. Syren of the Skies takes place 150(?) years later, when the Aerians, following the prophetic commands of the long-dead Natas, give control of the world back to the national governments. This leads to all sorts of entertainment, as the last heir of the Tsars promptly steals an Aerian skyship, duplicates it, and starts a world war that gets interrupted by most of the life on the planet being destroyed by a cosmic fire-cloud.
No, really, a cosmic fire-cloud. Maybe we do need terrain rules in Iron Stars, eh?
For my money, much better stories than the rather better-known Honeymoon in Space, although you still have to allow for a fair amount of dated "period" thinking...Anglo-Saxons are inherently a superior race, all of Islam is a united militaristic juggernaut, democracy is an inherently flawed concept that will lead to the blind rule of the uneducated masses, that sort of thing. Enjoyable despite that, and (amazingly) carried by Barnes & Noble.
Rich