We went to Space. Then we went to war.
2323 was the year the Aligned Intelligent Species fell apart, and Earth fell prey to invasion. Battles were fought in Space and on a hundred worlds, on land and underwater. Humanity was unprepared, and victory by no means assured…
In a 100-page tribute to the classic 1970s collections of SF cover art, 2323: The First Terran Galactic War stitches together more than 300 spectacular colour artworks, 3D and AI, into a tale of interstellar conflict – remembering the future as it used to be.
From the introduction by the Human History Society:
For generations Before Space, humans shared information by way of physical books: text and images stained into flexible plaques of compressed vegetable matter. For this first publication of the Human History Society, we thought it fitting to reproduce this charming format as closely as we could.
The Society was formed to bring together professionals and enthusiasts with shared interests in those niches of Human history either overlooked by formal academy, or too long settled into orthodox points of view. The so-called First Human Galactic War may seem a topic covered all too thoroughly already; but many of our members feel that it has been cast into a context of inevitable social progress which may not be appropriate – that is, wholly truthful. One such member is amateur spaceship historian Ian M. Palmer.
Copiously illustrated in full colour with painted, 3D-rendered and AI-generated images, 2323: The First Human Galactic War offers a unique perspective on this pivotal conflict.