The first book in the series covers autumn 1938 to spring 1939. After an initial tenacious resistance to the German army, subsequent
Polish and
Hungarian invasions combined with a
Slovak rebellion lead to
Czechoslovakia's collapse. In the
Spanish Civil War, Sanjurjo's decision to seize
Gibraltar from Britain ties the Nationalist Spaniards to the Axis side. France starts offering some aid to the hard-pressed Spanish Republicans who were on the verge of collapse, in addition to the meager aid they got from the Soviet Union –just enough to keep them going, but not to gain victory. The Spanish Civil War thus settles into a stalemate as both sides' foreign allies turn their attention to the larger war. When the anticommunist Polish government also decides to side with Germany, war erupts with the USSR; there is no
Nazi-Soviet Pact. Both the Germans
and the Soviets immediately find themselves fighting
two-front wars as the Soviets attack west and the Japanese
invade Siberia (there are no
Battles of Khalkhin Gol). Consequentially Germany launches the
Manstein Plan, its own westward offensive to knock France out of the war. The German forces are not as overwhelming as they would have been with another year of preparation, and some are also still tied down on the Eastern Front. Moreover, in this history the
Skoda factory was destroyed during the fierce Czech resistance, rather than falling intact into German hands and starting to produce high-quality tanks for them. The final result is that the German
Blitzkrieg is not as devastating as it would be in 1940, the British and French armies are able to hold the line outside
Paris, and there is no
Fall of France –which makes for a strategically different war from the
WWII we know, not least because there is no
Battle of Britain or
Attack on Pearl Harbor. Discontent grows within the German army as the
Western Front is threatened and has achieved little strategically, whilst dissatisfaction with Hitler's rash decision in starting the war in the first place leads to a purge of the officer corps. At home, although no
Kristallnacht occurs, discrimination and persecution against
German Jews continues to grow. ==
West and East==