 
In this stunning retelling of World War II, Harry Turtledove has created a blockbuster  saga that is thrilling, troubling, and utterly compelling. 
 It is 1943, the third  summer of the new war between the Confederate States of America and the United States,  a war that will turn on the deeds of ordinary soldiers, extraordinary heroes, and  a colorful cast of spies, politicians, rebels, and everyday citizens.
 The CSA president,  Jake Featherstone, has greatly miscalculated the North’s resilience. In Ohio, where  Confederate victory was once almost certain, Featherstone’s army is crumbling, and  reinforcements of uninspired Mexican troops cannot stanch a Northern assault on the  heartland. 
 The tide of war is changing, and victory seems within the grasp of the  USA. Still, new fighting flares from Denver to Los Angeles.
 Indeed, as the air,  ground, and water burn with molten fury, new and demonic tools of killing are unleashed,  and secret wars are unfolding. The U.S. government in Philadelphia has proof that  the tyrannical Featherstone is murdering African Americans by the tens of thousands  in a Texas gulag called Determination. And the leaders of both sides know full well  that the world’s next great power will not be the one with the biggest army but the  nation that wins the race against nature and science—and smashes open the power of  the atom.
 In Settling Accounts, Harry Turtledove blends vivid fictional characters  with a cast inspired by history, including the Socialist assistant secretary of war  Franklin Delano Roosevelt and beleaguered Confederate military commander Nathan Bedford  Forrest. In The Grapple, he takes his spellbinding vision to new heights as he captures  the heart and soul of a generation born and raised amid unimaginable violence. This  is a struggle of conquest and conscience, played out on American soil.