Grantville Gazette (2003–2022) When the novel
1632 was written, Flint did not intend to write an immediate sequel. However, following popular demand for a sequel Flint (a relatively new writer, but an experienced editor) invited other authors contracted to Baen to
share the universe to rapidly develop its potential. As a result, while the first long sequel was being written, Flint concurrently put together the
Ring of Fire anthology of short fiction by a wide range of authors. In parallel, the online message board
Baen's Bar received a strong response from fans following the release of the
digital advance copy of
1632. The forum rapidly evolved into several sub-communities, some act as technical consultant to Flint - for example on how modern technology could be implemented within the series. The high quality of fan fiction submitted to the message board prompted the creation of the official
Grantville Gazette magazine that publishes short stories and factual articles as part of the official 1632 series
canon, reviewed by Flint. Originally released sporadically, the
Gazette eventually evolved to become an online subscription magazine, published every 2 months, with authors paid for their submissions. Several volumes of the
Gazette were released in print form by
Baen Books, and serialized stories that were originally published in multiple issues of the
Gazette have been released in print form by The Ring of Fire Press. The
Ring of Fire anthologies of commissioned short fiction also continue, with one volume approximately every 4–5 years. The result had become a collaborative alternative history series consisting of interlinked novels and short stories, that can be regarded as adding additional layers of depth into the canon - the first level consisting of the "mainline" novels; the second level consisting of novels that take place in parallel "threads" (usually representing events in separate geographic regions); the third level consisting short fiction that has been published in print form (either drawn from the
Grantville Gazette, or commissioned separately as part of the
Ring of Fire anthology series); and the fourth level consisting of the stories published in the
Grantville Gazette. The third and fourth levels frequently provided more in-depth background, and showed the impact of the events in the novels on the ordinary population. The entire series canon was maintained by Flint.
1632 & Beyond (2023–present) A year after the demise of the
Grantville Gazette, some of Flint's fellow 1632 co-authors got together to form a new company called Flint's Shards Inc., which is dedicated in producing a new print and electronic magazine called ''Eric Flint's 1632 & Beyond
(colloquially referred to as 1632 & Beyond'') that would specialize in publishing short stories in the 1632 and other Assiti Shards universes on a bimonthly basis. The first issue was released in September 2023 and included short stories by
Jody Lynn Nye,
S.M. Stirling,
Virginia DeMarce, Vance Garrett, and Chuck Thompson that are set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed a short story set in the
Queen of the Seas universe and George Grant wrote a non-fiction piece. The second issue was released in November 2023 and included short stories by Sean Little, Marc Tyrrell, George Grant, Iver Cooper plus the writing team of Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett are all set in the 1632 universe with Bethanne Kim contributing a nonfiction article. The third issue was released in January 2024 and included short stories by Robert E. Waters, Bethanne Kim, Marc Tyrrell, and Garrett W. Vance, all set in the 1632 universe, with Iver Cooper contributing a nonfiction article. The fourth issue was released in March 2024 and included short stories by Bjorn Hasseler, Edith Wild, and Jack Carroll set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed another short story set in the
Queen of the Seas universe. The fifth issue was released in May 2024 and included short stories by Virginia DeMarce, Natalie Silk, George Grant, Marc Tyrrell, and Robert Finegold set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed a nonfiction article. The sixth issue was released in July 2024 and included short stories by Virginia DeMarce, Terry Howard, Robert E. Waters, and Tim Sayeau set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed a nonfiction article. The seventh issue was released in September 2024 and included short stories by Virginia DeMarce, Natalie Silk, George Grant, Marc Tyrrell, and Robert Finegold set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed a nonfiction article. The eighth issue was released in November 2024 and included short stories by Garrett W. Vance, Edith Wild, Bjorn Hasseler, Terry Howard, and Bethanne Kim. This edition also introduces writer Aaron Jamieson Greso's first work in the 1632 universe. Also mentioned is the disposition of a few out-of-print Ring of Fire Press titles. The Christmas-themed short stories that were first published in December 2021 in the anthology
A 1632 Christmas were re-released in two special issues of
1632 & Beyond as
Special Issue #1 and
Special Issue #2 that were released in November and December 2024 respectively. The ninth issue was released in January 2025 and included short stories by George Grant, Terry Howard, Marc Tyrrell, Garrett W. Vance, and Tim Sayeau set in the 1632 universe, while Iver Cooper contributed a nonfiction article. The tenth issue was released in March 2025 and included short stories by Garrett W. Vance, Virginia DeMarce, Sarah Hays, Edith Wild, and a first time literary contribution from Baen Books 1632 series cover artist Tom Kidd. The eleventh issue was released in May 2025 and included short stories or segments of longer works of fiction by Virginia DeMarce, Terry Howard, Lancelot Schaubert, Bethanne Kim, Gorg Huff, Jackie Britton Lopatin, and Mark Roth-Whitworth. The twelfth issue was released in July 2025 and included short stories that are centered around a common topic of the "Redbird Institute". Contributors included Tracy Morris, Bjorn Hasseler, George McClellan Grant, Natalie Silk, Marc Tyrrell, and Michael Knopp. Bethanne Kim contributes a piece of non-fiction. The thirteenth issue was released in September 2025 and was the second volume that included short stories that are centered around the common topic of the "Redbird Institute". Contributors included Garrett W. Vance, Bethanne Kim, Edith Wild, and Tom Kidd. The fourteenth issue was released in November 2025 and included short stories or segments of longer works of fiction by Virginia DeMarce, Terry Howard, John Deakins, Natalie Silk, Bjorn Hasseler, and introducing David Hankins. After a several issue hiatus, Jimmy Dick returns. Tracy Morris non-fiction contribution is about what life was like a quarter century ago at the end of the twentieth century (when the first book in the series came out), and how things have changed since then. The fifteenth issue was released in January 2026 and included short stories or segments of longer works of fiction by Edith Wild, Bethanne Kim, Chuck Thompson, Marc Tyrrell, David Hankins, and introducing Robert F. Lowell. In the non-fiction section, Jackie Britton Loptain writes about non-profit building restorations in
Mannington, the West Virginian city that Grantville is based on. The sixteenth issue was released in March 2025 and included short stories by Marc Tyrrell, Bethanne Kim, John Deakins, Jack Carroll, and Natalie Silk. ==
1632 plot threads==