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- From: pcrxs@valinor.giss.nasa.gov (Robert Schmunk)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written,alt.history.what-if,rec.answers,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: LIST: Alternate History Stories, 5 of 8
- Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written
- Date: 12 Apr 1994 10:59:18 -0400
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- Archive-name: sf/alt_history/part5
- Rec-arts-sf-written-archive-name: alt_history/part5
- Version: 18
- Posting-Frequency: Quarterly
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- Simak, Clifford, WHERE THE EVIL DWELLS (Ballantine 82)
- W: Dragons, fairies, etc, are real.
- S: The appearance of "The Evil" from over the river provides incentive to
- hold the Roman Empire together in a time of schism (c. 1400).
- Simmons, Mark, "The American Civil War: Another Story", in Miniature
- Wargames #105 (Feb 92)
- W: Shiloh was a one-day Confederate victory, and Grant did not rise to
- Union command so speedily.
- C: Summary of war-gamers' simulation of a complete Civil War, including the
- fall and recapture of Washington, and the final rebel surrended in Aug 1865.
- Simner, Janni Lee, "Learning Magic", in <AO>
- S:
- Simner, Janni Lee, "Out of Sight", in <BAOF>
- W: Helen Keller was not deaf and blind, but her sister was.
- S: Actress Keller recalls the trauma of living with her sister and the awful
- result while she decides what to do with her illegitimate baby.
- Skimin, Leonard, GRAY VICTORY (St. Martin's 88)
- W: Joe Johnston retained command at Atlanta and held Sherman off so long
- that McClellan won the 1864 US presidential election.
- S: In 1866, while Jeb Stuart is on trial for his actions at Gettysburg, John
- Brown's son lays plans for a black insurrection.
- Sladek, John T., "1937 AD!", in New Worlds Jul 67; BEST SF: 1967 (eds
- Harrison & Aldiss) (Berkley 68) and THE STEAM-DRIVEN BUS (Panther 73) (incl.
- in THE BEST OF JOHN SLADEK (Pocket 81))
- S: An inventor from the US of Columbia in 1878 sets out for 1937, where he
- encounters a man who can change history with the stroke of a pen.
- Smith, Allen J.M., "The Cab Driver from Hell in the Land of the Pieux Hawks",
- in L. RON HUBBARD PRESENTS WRITERS OF THE FUTURE: VOLUME VII (ed Budrys)
- (Bridge 91)
- S: A taxi somehow travels sideways to a N America never colonized by
- Europeans.
- Smith, Dean Wesley, "A Bubble for a Minute", in <BAOF>
- W: Wallis Simpson fell in love with FDR rather than the King of England.
- S: A high-school kid interviewing old Mrs. Simpson at the old folks home
- finds reality changes as she changes the details of her life story.
- Smith, Dean Wesley, "Black Betsy", in <AO>
- S:
- Smith, George Henry, "Take Me to Your Leader", in MICROCOSMIC TALES (eds
- Asimov et al) (Taplinger 80; DAW 92)
- W: The South won the Civil War.
- S: A scientist from another Earth warns of Russian attack, but the narrator
- lives in a world where Jeff Davis VI is hereditary president of the CSA.
- Smith, L. Neil, CONTACT AND COMMUNE
- --------------, CONVERSE AND CONFLICT
- W: Creatures other than humans achieved sapience.
- S:
- Smith, L. Neil, THE CRYSTAL EMPIRE (Bluejay/Tor 86; Tor 89)
- W: Christendom was destroyed in 1349 when an attempt to ship plague-ridden
- rats to Saracen lands backfired disastrously.
- S: In 2042, a Helvetic N American escorts a mission from the Saracen Caliph
- of Rome into the secretive, mysterious Aztec empire.
- Smith, L. Neil, THE PROBABILITY BROACH (Ballantine 80)
- W: The Whiskey Rebellion succeeded and the US Constitution was revoked.
- S: In 1987, a Denver cop investigating a scientist's murder crosses
- timelines and finds himself in a Libertarian utopia.
- --------------, "The Spirit of Exmas Sideways", in <Alt>
- S: In 1988, Detective Bear investigates another murder involving the
- crosstime machine.
- --------------, THE NAGASAKI VECTOR (Ballantine 83)
- S: In 1993, ...
- --------------, THE VENUS BELT (Ballantine 81)
- S: In 1999, with friends and relatives mysteriously disappearing, Bear is
- off to the asteroid belt to investigate a crosstime Hamiltonian plot.
- --------------, THE GALLATIN DIVERGENCE (Ballantine 85)
- S: In 2119, ...
- --------------, BRIGHTSUIT MCBEAR (Avon 88)
- S:
- --------------, TAFLAK LYSANDRA (Avon 88)
- S:
- --------------, TOM PAINE MARU (Avon ...)
- S:
- Smith, Martin Cruz, THE INDIANS WON (Belmont 70; Leisure 81)
- W: N American Plains Indians banded together to stop the white man's spread,
- resulting in East and West USAs with an AmerInd nation in the middle.
- S: History of the AmerInd nation alternates with Washington intrigues during
- 20th-century white vs. red tensions.
- T: German DER ANDERE SIEGER
- Snodgrass, Melinda M., QUEEN'S GAMBIT DECLINED (Warner/Popular Library 89)
- W: Magic exists, as do forces for good and evil.
- S: William of Nassau works with the White Queen to defeat the evil forces in
- Paris, eventually invading France in 1672.
- Snodgrass, Melinda M., WILD CARDS X: DOUBLE SOLITAIRE (Bantam 92)
- C: In same series as Martin's WILD CARDS I.
- Sobel, Robert, FOR WANT OF A NAIL...; IF BURGOYNE HAD WON AT SARATOGA
- (Macmillan 73)
- W: Burgoyne beat Gates at Saratoga, and the American rebellion collapsed.
- S: Dual history text of the Confederation of N America and the US of Mexico,
- from 1775 to 1971.
- C: Synopsis in Fadness's "What If the British Had Won the Revolutionary War?"
- Somtow, S.P., THE AQUILIAD [: AQUILA IN THE NEW WORLD] (Ballantine 83); rev
- of stories in <IAsfm> 18 Jan 82 and Apr 82 and Amazing Jan 83 and May 83
- ------------, THE AQUILIAD II: AQUILA AND THE IRON HORSE (Ballantine 88)
- ------------, THE AQUILIAD III: AQUILA AND THE SPHINX (Ballantine 89)
- W: Romans discovered the steam engine and conquered the world.
- S: Farcical adventures of a Roman general in the Americas (Terra Novum) and
- his entanglements with time guardians.
- T: "Aquila" as German "Aquila"
- Somtow, S.P., "Sunsteps", in Unearth Summer 77 and FIRE FROM THE WINE DARK
- SEA (Donning 83)
- S: Aztecs depopulate the world in order to meet sacrificial needs.
- Soukup, Martha, "Good Girl, Bad Dog", in <AO>
- S:
- Soukup, Martha, "Plowshare", in <AP>
- W: William Jennings Bryan was elected president in 1896 and decided to serve
- only one term. Also, Teddy Roosevelt never became president.
- S: In 1915, as Bryan and his wife look back at the years, the Lusitania is
- sunk and war looks imminent, giving Bryan a new message to preach.
- Soukup, Martha, "Rosemary's Brain", in <AK>
- W: Instead of a lobotomy, Rosemary Kennedy received an experimental
- operation that turned her into a genius.
- S: Rosemary discusses her plans for her future with her godfather.
- Spinrad, Norman, THE IRON DREAM (Avon 72; Gregg 77; Jove/HBJ 78; Pocket 82;
- Bantam 86)
- W: Hitler emigrated to the USA in 1919 and after several years as a
- commercial artist turned to writing SF.
- S: The text of Hitler's Hugo Award-winning novel LORD OF THE SWASTIKA.
- T: German DER STAHLERNE TRAUM
- Spruill, Steven G., "The Janus Equation", in BINARY STAR NO. 4 (ed Frenkel)
- (Dell 80)
- W: JFK wasn't assassinated.
- S: C. 2200, a man trying to create a time machine in a world dominated by
- multi-nat'l corporations is over-aggressively recruited by a competitor.
- Squire, J.C., "If It Had Been Discovered in 1930 that Bacon Really Did Write
- Shakespeare" (vt "Professor Gubbin's Revolution"), in London Mercury Jan 31,
- <If,c> and OUTSIDE EDEN (Heinemann 33; Books for Libraries 71)
- W: As the title says.
- S: Satirical look at the ensuing literary chaos.
- Squire, J.C., "What Might Have Happened", in OUTSIDE EDEN (Heinemann 33;
- Books for Libraries 71)
- W: Britain adopted Prohibition.
- S:
- Stableford, Brian, "Complications", in Amazing Feb 92
- W: Males of all vertebrate species are worm-like parasites living within
- female hosts.
- S: Tongue-in-cheek description of the present-day in that world, mentioning
- Pope Joan and Anna Freud.
- Stableford, Brian, THE EMPIRE OF FEAR (Simon & Schuster UK 88; Carroll & Graf
- 91; Ballantine 93); exp of "The Man who Loved the Vampire Lady", in <f&sf>
- Aug 88 and <YBSF6>
- W: Attila's horde brought real vampirism to Europe and the vampires took
- control, creating the empires of Gaul and Walachia.
- S: A 17th-century scientist's search for the secret of vampire immortality
- takes him to central Africa, and to later confrontation with Dragulya.
- Stafford, Terry: see Gygax, E. Gary, & Terry Stafford
- Stall, Michael, "Rice Brandy", in NEW WRITINGS IN SF 25 (ed Bulmer) (Sidgwick
- & Jackson 75; Corgi 76)
- S: With 20th-century help, a 15th-century Khmer king turns back a Thai
- invasion, then industrializes.
- Stapledon, Olaf, "East is West", in FAR FUTURE CALLING (Oswald Train 79)
- An Englishman temporarily trades places with his counterpart in a world
- where England prepares to challenge Japanese world domination.
- Stapp, Robert, A MORE PERFECT UNION (Harper's Magazine 70; Berkley 71)
- W: Lincoln ordered the evacuation of Fort Sumter, and the South was allowed
- to go in peace.
- S: In 1981, the USA faces a hostile, nuclear-capable, police-state CSA and
- decides that assassination is the only solution.
- Stasheff, Christopher, HER MAJESTY'S WIZARD (Ballantine 86)
- ---------------------, THE OATHBOUND WIZARD (Ballantine 93)
- ---------------------, THE WITCH DOCTOR (Ballantine 94)
- S: A grad student finds a manuscript which sends him to an another Earth
- where magic works and N Europe and most of Britain are covered with ice.
- Steele, Allen, "Goddard's People", in <IAsfm> Jul 91, <WMHB3> and RUDE
- ASTRONAUTS (Old Earth 93)
- W: Warned that Nazi Germany was developing a trans-Atlantic rocket, the US
- started a crash rocket development program, headed by Robert Goddard.
- S: A history of Project Blue Horizon and its critical race with the Nazis;
- concludes with mention of the first manned mission to Mars in 1976.
- -------------, "John Harper Wilson", in <IAsfm> Jun 89 and RUDE ASTRONAUTS
- (Old Earth 93)
- S: The US gov't plans to claim the moon, but the commander of the first
- manned landing goes in peace for all mankind.
- Steele, Allen, "Riders in the Sky", in <AO>
- S:
- Stephenson, Andrew M., THE WALL OF YEARS (Futura 79; rev Dell 80)
- S: Crosstime and time-travel intrigue centered on attempts to alter Alfred's
- dealing with the Danes.
- Sterling, Bruce, "Dori Bangs", in <IAsfm> Sep 89 and <YBSF7>
- S:
- Sterling, Bruce, & Lewis Shiner, "Mozart in Mirrorshades", in Omni Sep 85,
- MIRRORSHADES (Arbor House 86; Ace 88) and THE SEVENTH OMNI BOOK OF SCIENCE
- FICTION (ed Datlow)
- S: Europe and America of 1775 are exploited by the future of another
- timeline hungry for oil, but resistance forms.
- T: Portugese <title unknown>
- Sterling, Bruce: see also Gibson, William, & Bruce Sterling
- Stervermer, Caroline: see Wrede, Patricia C., & Caroline Stervermer
- < Stevens, Gordon, AND ALL THE KING'S MEN (Chapman 90; Pan 91)
- W: Germany decided in November 1939 to invade Britain the next year.
- S. Operation Seelowe begins 7 Sep 1940. Scottish resistance alone stands
- free till British forces gain liberation in April 1942.
- Stirling, S.M., "Cops and Robbers", in FAR FRONTIERS, Winter 85 (eds
- Pournelle & Baen) (Baen 86)
- W: Pitt led Britain on to an overwhelming victory in the Seven/Ten Years War
- and the American Revolution never happened.
- S: An FBI agent investigating a strange coin is kidnapped by a crosstime
- science-industrial spy.
- Stirling, S.M., MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA (Baen 88)
- --------------, UNDER THE YOKE (Baen 89)
- --------------, THE STONE DOGS (Baen 90)
- --------------, HEAVY IRON (not yet published)
- W: After the Netherlands declared war, Britain captured its Cape colony and
- later used it to resettle Tory refugees from the American Revolution.
- S: The Dominion of the Draka strives to take over the world (1940-2000) and
- only the US stands in the way. With much supplemental info in appendices.
- Stith, John E., "One Giant Step", in DINOSAUR FANTASTIC (eds Resnick &
- Greenberg) (DAW 93; SFBC 94)
- S: Intelligent reptiles go back 65M years, where one causes the death of the
- dinosaurs. Instead, insects develop intelligence and go back 65M years...
- Stone, Vince: see Shetterly, Will, & Vince Stone
- Sucharitkul, Somtow: see Somtow, S.P.
- Sullivan, Tim, "Dinosaur on a Bicycle", in <IAsfm> May 87
- W: The dinosaurs did not die out.
- S: Saurian time-travelers to the past encounter travelers from futures in
- which various species dominate. Chaos ensues.
- Sumner, M.C., "In Fourteen Hundred and Ninety-Three, Columbus Crossed the
- Frozen Sea", in Tomorrow Speculative Fiction Aug 93
- W: A deep ice age began in the early second millenium.
- S: Even after being abandoned by the Santa Maria and the Hielo, Columbus
- presses westward across the frozen-over Atlantic.
- Swanwick, Michael, "The Edge of the World", in FULL SPECTRUM 2 (eds Aronica
- et al) (Doubleday 89), <YBSF7> and THE LEGEND BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION (ed
- Dozois) (Legend 91; vt MODERN CLASSICS OF SCIENCE FICTION, St. Martin's 92,
- 93)
- W: Earth has an edge.
- S: Three teen-agers living at an American air force base in the Middle East
- climb down a stairway on the edge of the world.
- Swanwick, Michael, "In Concert", <IAsfm> Sep 92
- W: Rock & roll started decades earlier, and had the power to shape history.
- S: An American attends the final performance of Lenin, "The Boss", hearing
- such standards as "The Workers Control the Means of Production".
- Swanwick, Michael, IN THE DRIFT (Ace 85); exp of "Mummer Kiss", in UNIVERSE
- 11 (ed Carr) (Doubleday 81), and "Marrow Death", in <IAsfm> Dec 84
- W: Three Mile Island melted down, irradiating eastern Pennsylvania.
- S: Life in Philadelphia and the adjacent Drift, 100 years later, and the
- conflict for power.
- Talbot, Bryan, THE ADVENTURES OF LUTHER ARKWRIGHT (vol 1, Prout 82; vol 2,
- Valkyrie 87; vol 3, Prout 89)
- S:
- Tarr, Judith, "Cowards Die", in <AO>
- S:
- Tarr, Judith, "Queen of Asia", in <AW>
- W: Dismayed by her son Darius's show of cowardice in fighting Alexander,
- Sisygambis had him killed and became regent for her grand-son.
- S: Under Sisygambis's direction, the Persians attack Alexander from behind at
- Tyre, and she comes up with a novel fate for her new prisoner.
- Tarr, Judith, "Roncesvalles", in <WMHB2>
- W: Upon hearing of Roland's death and Ganelon's treachery, Charlemagne
- converted to Islam.
- S: Describes the event, but no follow through.
- Tarr, Judith, "Them Old Hyannis Blues", in <AK>
- W: Numerous musicians were instead politicians, and some politicians were
- instead musicians.
- S: After switching from big band to rock 'n roll, the Kennedy bros. play at
- President Presley's first inaugural ball, and foil an assassination attempt.
- ------------, "Elvis Invictus", in <BAOF>
- S: An overview of Presley's first term, a girl's visit years later to meet
- the King, and a much later leadership change in the Church of Elvis.
- Tenn, William, "Brooklyn Project", in SHOT IN THE DARK (ed Merrill) (Bantam
- 50), VOYAGERS IN TIME (ed Silverberg) (Meredith 67), THE WOODEN STAR
- (Ballantine 68), THE ROAD TO SCIENCE FICTION #3 (ed Gunn) (NAL/Mentor 79),
- <GSFS10>, etc
- S: Scientists send a sphere back in time, claiming it has no effect. Each
- time it comes back, things change but they just don't notice.
- Thayer, James Stewart, S-DAY: A MEMOIR OF THE INVASION OF ENGLAND (St.
- Martin's 90)
- W: Nazi Germany did not invade Russia, but geared up for an invasion of
- Britain on 28 May 1942.
- S: The American Expeditionary Force takes the brunt of the invasion and its
- commander violates the articles of war in order to save London.
- Thomas, Donald, PRINCE CHARLIE'S BLUFF (Macmillan 74)
- W: Montcalm defeated Wolfe, leading to French victory in the French and
- Indian War.
- S: The battle and subsequent break-up of BNA, with the Stuart restoration in
- Virginia following Bonnie Prince Charlie's victory at Annapolis.
- Thompson, Don, "Worlds Enough", in <BT>
- S: Stealing a timeline jumper in an accident, a man looks around for an
- invention, yet undiscovered in his home timeline, that will make him rich.
- Thompson, Roger, "If I had been... the Earl of Sherburne in 1762-5", in
- <IIHB>
- W: The Earl of Sherburne was placed in charge of peace negotiations with
- France after the 7 Year War, and then became Treasury Minister.
- C: The earl contemplates returning Canada to the French and avoiding taxes
- on the 13 colonies, actions which would prevent the American Revolution.
- Thompson, W.R., "The Plot to Save Hitler", in Analog Sep 93
- S: Two time travelers to 1903 Linz fight over the life of Adolf Hitler, one
- to prevent WW2 and the other to prevent murder.
- Thomsen, Brian M., "Bigger Than U.S. Steel", in <AO>
- S:
- Thomsen, Brian M., "A Night on the Plantation", in <BAOF>
- W: Instead of script approval, David O. Selznick let Margaret Mitchell pick
- the lead actor for GONE WITH THE WIND.
- S: Mitchell doesn't like Clark Gable, and after an argument with the studio
- picks Groucho Marx to play Rhett Butler.
- Thomsen, Brian M., "Paper Trail", in <AP>
- W: Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were fired by the Washington Post but
- continued their investigation of the Watergate break-in.
- S: Woodward's articles in the New York Post about Watergate and the murder
- of Bernstein lead to McGovern's election in 1972.
- Thomsen, Brian M., "A Sense of Loyalty, a Sense of Betrayal", in <AW>
- W: Sidney Reilly, caught as he prepares to overthrow Lenin and Trotsky, was
- offered a deal.
- S: The failure of the ace of spies' plot, with an epilog in 1943.
- Thurber, James, "If Grant Had Been Drinking at Appomattox", in New Yorker 6
- Dec 30, THE THURBER CARNIVAL (Harper & Row 45; Harper 53), <f&sf> Feb 52,
- VINTAGE THURBER (Hamish Hamilton 63), etc
- W: As the title says.
- S: Grant gives his sword to Lee.
- Tilton, Lois, "A Just and Lasting Peace", in <f&sf> Oct/Nov 91 and <YBSF9>
- W: Lincoln was assassinated early by Jesse and Frank James, and the South,
- suffering a harsher Reconstruction, never actually stopped fighting.
- S: The tale of a Southern boy during Reconstruction, with an afterword
- written in 1952 by his grandson, a member of the Nazi's RE Lee Brigade.
- Tilton, Lois, "Wunderwaffen", in The 14th Alternative Spr 90
- W: Nazi Germany got some of Hitler's secret weapons into action.
- S: A worker at Peenemunde participates in the struggel to get the V-rockets,
- including the V-X, on-line, but the Allies have the ultimate weapon.
- Toynbee, Arnold J., "The Forfeited Birthright of the Abortive Far Eastern
- Christian Civilization", in A STUDY OF HISTORY, VOLUME II (Oxford Univ 34)
- W: The Umayyads did not press on after their defeat at the Kish-Samarkand
- pass in 731.
- C: How Nestorian Christianity could have spread into Asia, later leading to
- Moslem destruction at the hands of Christianized Seljuks and Mongols.
- Toynbee, Arnold J., "The Forfeited Birthright of the Abortive Far Western
- Christian Civilization", in A STUDY OF HISTORY, VOLUME II (Oxford Univ 34)
- W: The Synod of Whitby (664) adopted the teachings of Colman, and Charles
- Martel lost at Tours.
- C: How European Christianity would have divided between the Celts of the
- North and the Roman-Orthodox of the South and East, with France Muslim.
- Toynbee, Arnold J., "The Forfeited Birthright of the Abortive Scandinavian
- Civilization", A STUDY OF HISTORY, VOLUME II (Oxford Univ 34)
- W: The Vikings captured Constantinople in 860, established stronger colonies
- in N America, harassed the Muslims in the Caspian, etc.
- C: How more aggressive expansion would have resulted in Viking control of N
- America, Europe and northern Asia by 1400.
- Toynbee, Arnold J., "If Alexander the Great had Lived On", in SOME PROBLEMS
- IN GREEK HISTORY (Oxford Univ 69)
- W: Alexander of Macedon listened to his physicians' advice in 323 BC, and
- later returned to the Mediterranean.
- S: How Alexander made the Pheonicians his Navy, conquered Carthage, allied
- with Rome, conquered India and Ch'in and finally died in 287 BC.
- C: Synopsis in Demandt's HISTORY THAT NEVER HAPPENED.
- Toynbee, Arnold J., "If Ochus and Philip had Lived On", in SOME PROBLEMS IN
- GREEK HISTORY (Oxford Univ 69)
- W: Artaxerxes III Ochus did not die in 338 BC and Philip II of Macedon did
- not die in 336 BC.
- S: Surviving an assassination attempt, Philip ends up killing son Alexander,
- conquers Rome and pushes Ochus's Persia back to the Euphrates.
- Trevelyan, G.M., "If Napoleon had Won the Battle of Waterloo", in Westminster
- Gazette Jul 07, CLIO: A MUSE (Longmans, Green 13; Longmans, Green 30; Books
- for Libraries 68) and <If,c>
- W: Blucher's breach of faith led to Napoleon's victory at "Mont St. Jean".
- S: Despite the Napoleon of Peace, his former enemies maintain their standing
- armies, stifling all reformist movements for decades.
- C: Synopsis in Fadness's "What If Napoleon Had Won at Waterloo?"
- T: German "Wenn Napoleon die Schlacht von Waterloo gewonnen hatte"
- Tsouras, Peter, DISASTER AT D-DAY: THE GERMANS DEFEAT THE ALLIES, JUNE 1944
- (Greenhill/Stackpole 94)
- S: A slight variation in unit placement changes the course of the
- invasion.
- Tuchman, Barbara, "If Mao Had Come to Washington", in Foreign Affairs Oct 72,
- NOTES FROM CHINA (Collier 72) and PRACTICING HISTORY (Knopf 81; Ballantine
- 82)
- W: Ambassador Hurley relayed Mao and Chou En-lai's request for a meeting
- with FDR in 1945.
- C: Primarily a discussion of why it made no difference, but a few brief
- comments on how it might have averted the Korean and Vietnam wars.
- Turtledove, Harry, THE CASE OF THE TOXIC SPELL DUMP (Baen 93)
- W: Magic works.
- S: Adventures of an inspector for the US Environmental Perfection Agency.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Counting Potsherds", in Amazing Mar 89, <WMHB1> and
- DEPARTURES (Ballantine 93)
- W: Xerxes led the Persians to victory over the Greeks, thereby preventing
- the spread of democracy.
- S: Several hundred years later, a Persian court eunuch is sent to Greece to
- learn the name of the Greek king defeated by Xerxes.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Departures", in <IAsfm> Jan 89, <WMHB2> and DEPARTURES
- (Ballantine 93)
- W: Mohammed became a Christian, and the lack of Moslem pressure meant
- Byzantium never fell but faced a technologically sophisticated Persia.
- S: Christian monks, including a powerful hymn writer named Mouamet, flee a
- Sinai monastery for Constantinople as Persian forces approach.
- -----------------, AGENT OF BYZANTIUM (Congdon & Weed 87; Worldwide 88; Baen
- 94)
- (---------------), "The Eyes of Argos" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6814"), in Amazing
- Jan 86
- S: In the 14th century, Byzantine agent Basil Argyros discovers that the
- telescope has been invented in the steppes north of the Danube.
- (---------------), "Strange Eruptions" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6816"), in <IAsfm>
- Aug 86
- S: Argyros finds a cure for smallpox.
- (---------------), "Pillar of Cloud, Pillar of Fire" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6818"),
- in <IAsfm> 15 Dec 89 and DEPARTURES (Ballantine 93) (not in 1987 and 1988
- eds of AGENT OF BYZANTIUM)
- S: Argyros is sent to investigate the delay in the building of the new
- Alexandria lighthouse and discovers a labor strike.
- (---------------), "Unholy Trinity" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6824"), in Amazing Jul
- 85
- S: Argyros discovers the invention of dynamite.
- (---------------), "Archetypes" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6825"), in Amazing Nov 85
- S: Argyros investigates numerous identical seditious handbills appearing
- near the Persian frontier.
- (---------------), "Images" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6826"), in <IAsfm> Mar 87
- S: Argyros is embroiled in an argument about religious icons.
- (---------------), "Superwine" (vt "Etos Kosmou 6829"), in <IAsfm> Apr 87
- and HIGH ADVENTURE (eds Manson & Ardai) (Barnes & Noble ...)
- S: Argyros is also there for the invention of brandy.
- Turtledove, Harry, A DIFFERENT FLESH (Congdon & Weed 88)
- W: European explorers discovered Ramapithecan "sims" instead of red-skinned
- men when they reached the New World.
- (---------------), "Vilest Beast", in Analog Sep 85
- S: In 1610, sims steal a babe from a Jamestown cradle and her father
- ventures into the wilderness to save her.
- (---------------), "And So to Bed", in KALEIDOSCOPE (Ballantine 90) and TERRY
- CARR'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY OF THE YEAR (ed Carr) (Tor 87)
- S: In 1661, Samuel Pepys purchases two sims to help out around the house and
- contemplates the origins of species.
- (---------------), "Around the Salt Lick", in Analog Feb 86
- S: In 1691, a Virginia hunter is captured by wild sims and hopes that his
- sim assistant will think of rescuing him.
- (---------------), "The Iron Elephant", in Analog May 86
- S: In 1782, steam-driven trains first appear, and a race is held with one of
- the mammoth-pulled trains they threaten to replace.
- (---------------), "Though the Heavens Fall", in Analog Sep 86
- S: In 1804, a lawyer uses the existence of sims to argue that a runaway
- Negro slave should not be returned to his one-time owner.
- (---------------), "Trapping Run"
- S: In 1812, a trapper in the Rockies is wounded by a bear and is nursed back
- to health by sims.
- (---------------), "Freedom"
- S: In 1988, university students opposed to medical experiments on sims
- kidnap a sim carrying AIDS but do not take enough of the new HIV inhibitor.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Down in the Bottomlands", in Analog Jan 93
- W: The Mediterranean basin never opened to the ocean.
- S: In modern days, a murder during a tour of the Bottomlands Trench reveals
- a plot to destroy the "Gibraltar" mountains with a nuclear weapon.
- Turtledove, Harry, THE GUNS OF THE SOUTH: A NOVEL OF THE CIVIL WAR
- (Ballantine 92, 93); excerpt publ. as "The Long Drum Roll", in <FCW>
- W: The Confederacy obtained advanced weaponry just before the Wilderness.
- S: Afrikaaners from 2014 provide the CSA with AK-47s, etc, leading to
- Confederate victory in the Civil War, but strings are attached to the gift.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Hindsight", Analog mid-Dec 84 and KALEIDOSCOPE
- (Ballantine 90)
- S: A woman from 1988 goes back 40 years and sells stories written in between
- plus accounts of famous events, such as "Neutron Star" and "Watergate".
- Turtledove, Harry, "In the Presence of Mine Enemies", in <IAsfm> Jan 92 and
- DEPARTURES (Ballantine 93)
- W: Isolationist America stayed out of WW2 until it was attacked by Germany
- and Japan a generation after the fall of Britain and Russia.
- S: Even in a 2010 Berlin, at the heart of a world dominated by Nazi Germany,
- Jews will still survive.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Islands in the Sea", in <Alt> and DEPARTURES (Ballantine
- 93)
- W: Constantinople and the Byzantine Empire fell to the Muslims in the early
- 700s.
- S: Fifty years after the fall of Constantinople, the king of the Bulgars
- invites Muslims and Christians to decide which faith he should adopt.
- Turtledove, Harry, "King of All", in NEW DESTINIES VOLUME VI/WINTER 1988 (ed
- Baen) (Baen 88)
- W: The mysteries of coffee were never discovered.
- S: A cop watches several new reports about the new drug from Columbia,
- caffeine, and orders a hit of "coke" at a MacDonald's the next day.
- Turtledove, Harry, "The Last Article", in <f&sf> Jan 88, <YBSF6>, <WMHB2> and
- THE FANTASTIC WORLD WAR II (ed McSherry) (Baen 90)
- W: Hitler's armies penetrated all the way to India.
- S: Gandhi preaches non-violent resistance to the German occupation.
- T: German "Das letzte Gebot"
- Turtledove, Harry, "The Pugnacious Peacemaker", in THE WHEELS OF IF & THE
- PUGNACIOUS PEACEMAKER (Tor SF Double #20) (Tor 90)
- C: Sequel to de Camp's "The Wheels of If".
- S: Now a judge of an internat'l court, the bishop is sent to S America to
- adjudicate a territorial dispute between the Incas and the Moslem Amazon.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Ready for the Fatherland", in <WMHB3>
- W: Hitler was shot and killed by one of his generals on 19 Feb 1943 in
- retaliation for an insult, and his successors made peace with the Soviets.
- S: In 1979 fascist Croatia, British agents meet with a Serbian partisan
- seeking weapons.
- Turtledove, Harry, "Report of the Special Committee on the Quality of Life",
- in UNIVERSE 10 (ed Carr) (Doubleday 80), <WMHB4> and DEPARTURES (Ballantine
- 93)
- W: Columbus's proposed voyage was subject to an environmental impact study.
- S: The text of the report, suggesting that Columbus be turned down.
- Turtledove, Harry, A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE (Ballantine 90)
- W: The formation of Mars resulted in a larger planet, capable of sustaining
- a thicker atmosphere and surface water.
- S: After a tool-bearing lifeform destroys a Viking probe on the surface of
- "Minerva", competitive American and Soviet manned missions are sent out.
- Turtledove, Harry, WORLDWAR: IN THE BALANCE (Ballantine 94)
- W: Space aliens arrived on Earth in May 1942.
- S: Surprised to find Earth's technology so advanced after a visit 1600 years
- before, the aliens still invade, forcing odd alliances between enemies.
- -----------------, WORLDWAR: TILTING THE BALANCE (Ballantine, not yet
- published)
- -----------------, WORLDWAR: UPSETTING THE BALANCE (Ballantine, not yet
- published)
- -----------------, WORLDWAR: FINDING THE BALANCE (Ballantine, not yet
- published)
- S:
- Turtledove, Harry, & Richard Dreyfuss, THE TWO GEORGES (Tor, not yet
- published)
- W: The American Revolution ended peacefully, but with the colonies still
- part of the British crown.
- S:
- Utley, Steven, "Look Away", in <f&sf> Feb 92
- W: Albert Sidney Johnston survived Shiloh (a Confederate victory) and
- carried the Civil War north to Ohio.
- S: After the war, former army officers debate whether the CSA should pursue
- its own version of "manifest destiny" in Mexico and points south.
- Utley, Steven, & Howard Waldrop, "Custer's Last Jump", in UNIVERSE 6 (ed
- Carr) (Doubleday 76; Popular Library 77); THE BEST SCIENCE FICTION OF THE
- YEAR #6 (ed Carr) (Holt, Rinehart & Winston 77); SCIENCE FICTION A TO Z (eds
- Asimov et al) (Houghton Mifflin 82); <AH>; etc
- W: Ben Franklin invented the internal combustion engine and the Civil War
- was fought with mechanized transport.
- S: Info about the airplane Crazy Horse inherited from the Confederacy and
- later flew at the Little Big Horn.
- Van Arnam, Dave: see White, Ted, & Dave Van Arnam
- van den Daele, Wolfgang: see Boehme, Gernot, Wolfgang van den Daele, &
- Wolfgang Krohn, + E.G.H. Joffe (tr)
- Van Loon, Hendrik Willem, "If the Dutch had Kept Nieuw Amsterdam", in <If,b>
- W: After recapturing Manhattan in 1673, the Dutch decided to keep it while
- negotiating the Treaty of Westminster.
- S: Overview of the colony's history until its purchase by the United States
- in 1841, particularly its role as arms merchant to N America.
- Van Rjndt, Phillipe, THE TRIAL OF ADOLF HITLER (Summit 78)
- W: Hitler faked his suicide and survived WW2, but was found in the 1970s.
- S: An internat'l tribunal considers his fate.
- Vanauken, Sheldon, "The World After the South Won", in Southern Partisan
- Spring 84
- W: Britain recognized the Confederacy in Dec 1862, and her contribution of
- troops tipped the scales at Gettysburg.
- S: The story of the intervention, and some of the later effects of the
- British-Confederate alliance.
- Villard, Oswald Garrison, "Issue and Men", in The Nation 22 Oct 38
- W: Germany won the Battle of the Marne.
- S:
- Voermans, Paul, THE WEIRD COLONIAL BOY (Gollancz 93, 94)
- S:
- Von Rospach, Charles, "'Til Death Do Us Part", in <AK>
- W: Marilyn Monroe was caught sneaking out of the White House in the middle
- of a 1962 night.
- S: After her suicide, Monroe's ghost haunts JFK, urging him to find a way
- to be with her.
- Waldman, Milton, "If Booth had Missed Lincoln", in Scribner's Nov 30 and
- <If,abc>
- W: John Wilkes Booth's gun misfired.
- S: Critical review of a Lincoln biography which blamed the president's woes
- on the Radical Republicans rather than on his reconstruction policies.
- C: Synopsis in Fadness's "What If Booth's Bullet Had Missed Lincoln?"
- T: German "Wenn Booth Prasident Lincoln verfehlt hatte"
- Waldron, Webb, "If Lincoln had Yielded", in Century Magazine Jun 26
- W: Lincoln withdrew Major Anderson et al from Fort Sumter.
- S: In 1926, an Englishman discusses society, literature and politics with
- three Northerners variously happy and unhappy with the events of 1861.
- Waldrop, Howard, "The Effects of Alienation", in Omni Jun 92
- W: On the brink of defeat, Nazi Germany employed nuclear-tipped rockets to
- win WW2.
- S: 15 years later, a Nazi secret policeman attends "The Three Stooges Space
- Opera" at a Zurich cafe run by the widow of Berthold Brecht.
- Waldrop, Howard, "Fin de Cycle", in NIGHT OF THE COOTERS (Ursus/Ziesing 90;
- Ace 93; rev Legend 91) and <IAsfm> mid-Dec 91
- W: The industrial revolution took an odd twist, resulting in steam-powered
- stilts and multi-wheel cycles for transport.
- S: In 1890s Paris, Melies joins with Rousseau, Satie, Proust and Picasso to
- make a movie about the Dreyfus affair.
- Waldrop, Howard, "Household Words; or, The Powers-That-Be", in Amazing 589
- Winter 94
- W: The Industrial Revolution followed a different path, with electric power
- widely available by the 1840s.
- S: Charles Dickens gives a public reading of THE CHRISTMAS GARLAND,
- featuring Eben Mizer, Giant Tim, et al.
- Waldrop, Howard, "Hoover's Men", in Omni Oct 88, NIGHT OF THE COOTERS (Ursus/
- Ziesing 90) and OMNI VISIONS ONE (ed Datlow) (Omni 93)
- W: Al Smith beat Herbert Hoover in the election of 1928.
- S: Afterwards, Smith asks Hoover to become head of the new Federal Radio
- Agency, which also gives TV an early push.
- Waldrop, Howard, "Ike at the Mike", in Omni Jun 82, THE FIRST OMNI BOOK OF
- SCIENCE FICTION (ed Datlow) (Zebra 83), HOWARD WHO? (Doubleday 86) and
- STRANGE THINGS IN CLOSE-UP (Legend 90)
- W: Dwight Eisenhower cashed in his train ticket to West Point so that he
- could learn to play jazz clarinet.
- S: In 1968, Senator Aron Presley attends Ike's final performance when
- President Joe Kennedy awards medals to him and Louis Armstrong.
- Waldrop, Howard, "The Lions are Asleep This Night", in Omni Aug 86, ALL ABOUT
- STRANGE MONSTERS OF THE RECENT PAST (Ursus 87), <87AWBSF>, STRANGE THINGS IN
- CLOSE-UP (Legend 89), STRANGE MONSTERS OF THE RECENT PAST (Ace 91), and
- FUTURE EARTHS: UNDER AFRICAN SKIES (eds Resnick & Dozois) (DAW 93)
- W: Columbus found the Americas uninhabited. Later, African slaves imported
- to mine Peruvian gold rebelled, leading to white decline worldwide.
- S: In 1894, an African boy writes a play about an African king while reading
- a history of the fall of European power.
- Waldrop, Howard, "The Passing of the Western", in RAZORED SADDLES (eds
- Lansdale & LoBrutto) (Dark Harvest 89; Avon 90) and NIGHT OF THE COOTERS
- (Ursus/Ziesing 90)
- W: Taming the American West also involved bringing water to it, plus the
- film industry set up in Boise.
- S: Excerpts from books and magazine articles about Boise's one-time
- fascination with cloudbusters.
- Waldrop, Howard, THEM BONES (Ace 84; Ziesing 89; Legend 93)
- S: Time travelers trying to avert WW3 end up in wrong locales: one in right
- time, wrong timeline; the rest vice versa.
- Waldrop, Howard, "...The World as We Know't", in Shayol #6, HOWARD WHO?
- (Doubleday 86), STRANGE THINGS IN CLOSE-UP (Legend 89) and THE NORTON BOOK
- OF SCIENCE FICTION (eds LeGuin & Attebery) (Norton 93)
- W: Phlogiston exists.
- S: A late 19th-century scientist attempts to isolate pure phlogiston, with
- apocalyptic results.
- Waldrop, Howard: see also Utley, Steven, & Howard Waldrop
- Wall, John W.: see Sarban
- Walling, William, "Memo to the Leader", in Galaxy Dec 77-Jan 78
- W: The British army at Dunkirk was lost, and Germany subsequently invaded
- and conquered England.
- S: An American historian from a Nazi-dominated 2075 goes back to 1940 to
- stop a neo-Nazi from 1974 who traveled back to effect the divergence.
- Watson, Ian, CHEKHOV'S JOURNEY (Carroll & Graf 89, 91)
- S: Hypnotized to portray Anton Chekhov's Sakhalin trip, an actor instead
- describes an anachronistic expedition to the Tunguska site.
- Watt-Evans, Lawrence, "The Murderer", in <IAsfm> Apr 93
- W: Men responsible for mass deaths of the 20th century died prematurely.
- S: A man arrested for murder claims to be a time traveler who has prevented
- greater carnage.
- Watt-Evans, Lawrence, "New Worlds", in <IAsfm> Dec 91 and CROSSTIME TRAFFIC
- (Ballantine 92)
- S: Crosstime traveler offers to sell the secret to parallel worlds, and
- finds one with faster-than-light travel. Both sides fear the other.
- C: Crosstimers are from world where Hitler was killed in 1923 by a thrown
- beer bottle, but no further development is given.
- Watt-Evans, Lawrence, "Storm Trooper", in <IAsfm> Jan 92 and CROSSTIME
- TRAFFIC (Ballantine 92)
- S: Reality storms occasionally swap pieces of Earth with pieces of
- alternates, and New York sets up a Discontinuity Control Squad.
- Watt-Evans, Lawrence, "Truth, Justice, and the American Way", in <AP> and
- CROSSTIME TRAFFIC (Ballantine 92)
- W: Smith split the Democrats in 1932, causing Hoover to beat FDR. The US-
- Japan fight started earlier, and a firm response at Munich averted WW2.
- S: 20 years later, the Secretary of State looks for a country to which he
- can name a Jewish consul without offending the host government.
- Watt-Evans, Lawrence, "Why I Left Harry's All-Night Hamburgers", in <IAsfm>
- ...; THE NEW HUGO WINNERS, VOLUME II (ed Asimov); WHY I LEFT HARRY'S ALL-
- NIGHT HAMBURGERS AND OTHER STORIES FROM <IAsfm> (eds Williams & Ardai)
- (Delacorte 90) and CROSSTIME TRAFFIC (Ballantine 92)
- --------------------, "A Flying Saucer with Minnesota Plates", in <IAsfm> Aug
- 91, CROSSTIME TRAFFIC (Ballantine 92) and UFO'S AND ALIENS (eds Manson &
- Ardai) (Smithmark 93)
- S: A West Virginia diner caters to late-night customers from parallel
- Earths.
- C: Except for short comments on possibilities, neither story is particularly
- AH.
- Webb, Lucas: see Reginald, Robert
- Weissman, Barry Alan, "Past Touch-the-Sky Mountain", in If May 68
- W: Marco Polo discovered America.
- S: An English merchant and wives in Chinese America is mysteriously
- transported crosstime to the Lone Star State, where he meets a traffic cop.
- Wells, H.G., A MODERN UTOPIA (Chapman & Hall 05; Univ Nebraska 67); incl. in
- WORKS, vol. 9 (Scribner's 25)
- W: The Dark Ages never happened.
- S: A look at a Utopian 20th century.
- C: Borderline AH, as the world is identical to Earth except that it is
- "beyond Sirius".
- Wentz, Richard E., "Reflections of a Rebellion Averted", in Christian Century
- 23-30 Jun 76
- W: The American Revolution never occurred.
- S: Musings on life in idyllic, non-nationalist N America, but without any
- detail.
- West, Wallace, RIVER OF TIME (Avalon 63)
- S: Teen-agers try to avert WW3 by saving Julius Caesar.
- Westheimer, David, LIGHTER THAN A FEATHER: A NOVEL (Little Brown 71; vt
- DOWNFALL, Bantam 72)
- W: The atomic bomb was not used on Japan.
- S: A soldier's eye view of Operation Olympic, the invasion of Kyushu.
- Whitbourn, John, A DANGEROUS ENERGY (Gollancz 92, 93)
- W: Magic works: Also, the English Civil War ended in 1649 with the exile of
- Oliver Cromwell.
- S: London in a 1967 where the Protestant reformation failed. Charts the rise
- of Tobias Oakley as a Church magician.
- Whitbourn, John, POPES AND PHANTOMS (Gollancz 93); exp from stories in POPES
- & PHANTOMS (Haunted Library 92)
- S: Admiral Slovo looks back on his life fom 1486 in a world which is not
- quite ours.
- White, James, THE SILENT STARS GO BY (Ballantine 91)
- W: C. 200 BC, an Irishman returned home from Alexandria with the plans for
- Hero's aeolipile, leading to an industrial revolution 1000 years early.
- S: In 1491, the Empire of Hibernia launches man's first starship, and her
- outspoken surgeon suspects a religious conspiracy aboard.
- White, Mel., "Sam Clemens and the Notable Mare", in <AW>
- W: Sam Clemens headed east from Nevada in 1864 and was captured by
- Quantrill's Raiders
- S: Sam's Indian horse does his part to rout the guerilla band when Union
- soldiers arrive.
- White, Ted, THE JEWELS OF ELSEWHEN (Belmont 67)
- S:
- White, Ted, & Dave Van Arnam, SIDESLIP (Pyramid 68)
- W: Alien intervention averted WW2.
- S: Hitler ends up in America, calling for resistance against the "angels."
- Wildavsky, Aaron, "What If the U.S. Had Had One Law for Its Allies and
- Another for Its Adversaries? The Suez Crisis (1956)", in <WIESSF>
- W: The US did not come down hard on France and Britain during the 1956 war.
- C: Scholarly speculations on alternative outcomes, including friendlier
- relations with France, and an Israel less threatened by Arabs.
- Wilder, Cherry, "Kaleidoscope"
- W: The Aztecs were not conquered.
- S:
- Williams, Emlyn, HEADLONG: A NOVEL (Heinemann 80; Viking 81; Magnum 82)
- W: The British royal family was wiped out by a 1935 airship disaster, and it
- took 5 weeks to locate an heir.
- S: A 25-year-old stage actor becomes king of England and discovers the
- limits on royal power in the 1900s.
- C: Basis for the non-AH movie KING RALPH.
- Williams, Frank Purdy, HALLIE MARSHALL: A TRUE DAUGHTER OF THE SOUTH (Abbey
- 1900)
- W: The South won at Gettysburg, and the British recognized the Confederacy
- and broke the Northern blockade.
- S: A man awakens in a 1900 in which slavery still exists, in a much altered
- form, and is in fact superior to the lives of Northern factory workers.
- Williams, Philip M., "What If Hugh Gaitskell Had Become Prime Minister?
- (1963)", in <WIESSF>
- W: The British Labour party leader did not suddenly die in Jan 1963.
- C: A more moderateparty and movement results, with general economic success
- and an early end to Rhodesia's UDI plans.
- Williams, Walter Jon, "No Spot of Ground", in <IAsfm> Nov 89, <WMHB2> and
- FACETS (Tor 90)
- W: Edgar Allen Poe did not die in 1849, but lived to become a Confederate
- general.
- S: After Pickett becomes ill, Poe takes command of his troops at the battle
- of Hanover Junction during the Forty Days.
- Williams, Walter Jon, "Red Elvis", in <AO>
- S:
- Williams, Walter Jon, "Wall, Stone, Craft", in <f&sf> Oct/Nov 93 and WALL,
- STONE, CRAFT (Pulphouse/Axolotl 93)
- W: Lord Byron was not born with a club foot and went on to be a famous
- cavalryman, making his name for capturing Napoleon at Waterloo.
- S: Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley twice meet the famous soldier.
- Williamson, Jack, THE LEGION OF TIME (Bluejay 85)
- S: Hero from 1930s is shown two possible futures which hinge on whether or
- not a particular event happens; future woman tries to affect what happens.
- Wilson, Robert Charles, GYPSIES (Doubleday 89)
- S:
- Wilson, Robert Charles, MYSTERIUM (Bantam 94)
- W: The Roman empire was not Christianized, and gnosticism became the
- dominant branch of Christianity
- S: An accident in a secret lab moves an entire Michigan town sideways to a
- world where the Anglo-French N American republic is at war with Spain.
- Windsor, Philip, "If I had been... Alexander Dubcek in 1968", in <IIHB>
- W: Dubcek retained more control over events during Prague Spring.
- C: Musings on a middle course which might have averted a Soviet invasion.
- Wodhams, Jack, "Try Again", in Amazing Nov 68
- W: Germany pursued a more rational course in WW2, avoiding the invasion of
- Russia til 44 and tipping the US off to Japanese plans in the Pacific.
- S: A man is reborn as himself, with all his adult knowledge. When word
- spreads, he is kidnaped by the Nazis and a different WW2 results.
- Wolfe, Gene, "How I Lost the Second World War and Helped Turn Back the German
- Invasion", in Analog May 73, THE BEST OF ANALOG (ed Bova) (Baronet 78; Ace
- ...) and GENE WOLFE'S BOOK OF DAYS (Doubleday 81); incl in CASTLE OF DAYS
- (Tor 92)
- W: Germany and Japan used economic warfare instead of military conquest in
- the 1930s and 40s. Also, Churchill returned to journalism after WW1.
- S: A retired US Army officer from Abilene KS invents a game called World
- War, and participates in a race between German and British compact cars.
- Womack, Jack, TERRAPLANE: A NOVEL (Tor 90)
- W: Lincoln was murdered in Baltimore on the way to his inauguration, and
- Teddy Roosevelt freed the slaves in 1905. Later, Zangara killed FDR.
- S: Fleeing an ultra-violent future Moscow, corporate agents somehow end up
- in 1939 New York of a different past.
- ------------, ELVISSEY (Tor 93; Easton 93; HarperCollins UK 94)
- S: Two agents from that future go back to the alternate world's 1953 to
- kidnap the analog of their messiah, Elvis Presley.
- C: Non-AH entries in series are AMBIENT and HEATHERN.
- Wrede, Patricia C., & Caroline Stervermer, SORCERY AND CECILIA (Ace 89)
- W: Magic works, in Regency London.
- S:
- Wright, Esmond, "If I had been... Benjamin Franklin in the Early 1770s", in
- <IIHB>
- W: Franklin returned to America in 1775 with evidence of a softening British
- attitude towards dealings with the colonies.
- C: Franklin contemplates the troubles, and then describes the appointment of
- Washington as governor of Vandalia (Ohio) and other compromises.
- Wu, William, ROBERT SILVERBERG'S TIME TOURS #1: THE ROBIN HOOD AMBUSH (Harper
- 90)
- S:
- C: Follow-up to Silverberg's UP THE LINE.
- Wyndham, John, "Random Quest", in CONSIDER HER WAYS & OTHERS (M. Joseph 61;
- Penguin 65), THE INFINITE MOMENT (Ballantine 61), AS TOMORROW BECOMES TODAY
- (ed Sullivan) (Prentice-Hall 74), etc
- W: The League of Nations prevented WW2.
- S: A man searches for the analog of a woman with whom he fell in love in a
- parallel world.
- C: Basis for the movie QUEST FOR LOVE.
- Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn, ARIOSTO: ARIOSTO FURIOSO, A ROMANCE FOR AN ALTERNATIVE
- RENAISSANCE (Pocket 80)
- W: Lorenzo de Medici did not die in 1492, but lived to unite Italy in 1515.
- S: In 1533, a court poet to Damiano de Medici is involved in intrigues to
- hold Italy together but dreams of a world where he is a famous soldier-poet.
- Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn, "An Exaltation of Spiders", in BEYOND THE GATE OF
- WORLDS (Tor 91)
- C: In same timeline as Silverberg's THE GATE OF WORLDS.
- S: The True Inca, seeking a solution to possible invasion by the False Inca
- of Brazil, sends a mission to the Maori nation.
- Yarbro, Chelsea Quinn, ON SAINT HUBERT'S THING (Cheap Street 82)
- S: Religious intrigue in a world where Christian Europe is divided north vs.
- south.
- Yulsman, Jerry, ELLEANDER MORNING: A NOVEL (St. Martin's/Marek 84; Tor 85)
- W: Hitler died in 1913 while still a starving artist.
- S: A woman is mystified by a strange book entitled the TIME-LIFE HISTORY OF
- WW2 and by her grandmother's murder of an obscure Viennese artist.
- Zebrowski, George, "The Cliometricon", in Amazing May 75, <BT> and THE
- MONADIC UNIVERSE (Ace 77)
- S: A machine lets historians study AHs, with looks at D-Day and Thermopylae.
- -----------------, "The Number of the Sand", in Amazing Aug 91 and <WMHB3>
- S: A cliometrician examines the possible lives of Hannibal and their effect
- on the 2nd Punic War.
- -----------------, "Let Time Shape", in Amazing Mar 92 and <WMHB4>
- S: Examines the possibilities of Columbus finding the Americas populated by
- the techonologically sophisticated descendants of refugees from Carthage.
- Zebrowski, George, "The Eichmann Variations", in LIGHT YEARS AND DARK (ed
- Bishop) (Berkley 84) and NEBULA AWARDS 20 (ed Zebrowski) (HBJ 85)
- W: WW2 ended with Japan surrendering after the Allies dropped nuclear
- weapons on Germany in 1946.
- S: Adolf Eichmann, captured by the Israelis in 1961, is executed 6e6 times.
- Zebrowski, George, "Lenin in Odessa", in Amazing Mar 90 and <WMHB2>
- W: Lenin was assassinated in 1918 by a Russian expatriate.
- S: Stalin describes the assassin and the occasion.
- Zebrowski, George, STRANGER SUNS (Bantam 91); rev of "Stranger Suns", serial
- in Amazing Jan and Mar 91
- S: An alien ship found in Antarctica includes portals to alternate Earths,
- but those who explore them can never return to their home lines.
- Zelazny, Roger, "The Game of Blood and Dust", in Galaxy Apr 75, THE BEST
- FROM GALAXY VOLUME IV (ed Baen) (Award 76), THE LAST DEFENDER OF CAMELOT
- (Pocket 80; Underwood/Miller 81; Avon 88), etc
- S: Two aliens play at changing events in our past to compete in achieving
- their individual goals (success or failure for humanity).
- Zelazny, Roger, ROADMARKS (Ballantine 79, 94)
- S: On a strange road that reaches from past to future, a man fights
- assassins and attempts to prevent a Greek defeat at Marathon.
-
- Reference Materials:
-
- Alkon, Paul J., "From Utopia to Uchronia: L'AN 2440 and NAPOLEON
- APOCRYPHE", in ORIGINS OF FUTURISTIC FICTION (Univ Georgia 87)
- C: Includes extensive discussion of Geoffroy-Chateau's NAPOLEON APOCRYPHE,
- with comments on Renouvier's UCHRONIE.
- Ash, Brian (ed), THE VISUAL HISTORY OF SCIENCE FICTION (Harmony 77; Pan 78)
- C: Includes discussion of AH (pp 116, 121-123) and parallel worlds (142-
- 144), with bibliographies.
- Brownlow, Kevin, HOW IT HAPPENED HERE: THE MAKING OF A FILM (Secker & Warburg
- 68; Doubleday 68)
- C: Description of the making of IT HAPPENED HERE, a movie directed by
- Brownlow and Andrew Mollo, about a nurse in Nazi-occupied Britain.
- Carter, Paul A., "The Fate Changer: Human Destiny and the Time Machine", in
- THE CREATION OF TOMORROW (Columbia Univ 77)
- C: Includes short discussion of some Change the Past stories (e.g. Moore's
- BRING THE JUBILEE and Ryan's "The Mosaic").
- ---------------, "The Phantom Dictator: Science Fiction Discovers Hitler", in
- THE CREATION OF TOMORROW (Columbia Univ 77)
- C: Includes short discussion of some WW2-related AH stories (e.g. Dick's THE
- MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE and Mullally's HITLER HAS WON).
- Chamberlain, Gordon B., "Allohistory in Science Fiction", in <AH>
- C: Extensive discussion of what AH is and is not.
- Clute, John, "Hitler Wins", in <ESF2>
- C: Encyclopedia entry citing various stories involving Axis victory in WW2.
- Demandt, Alexander, + Colin. D. Thompson (tr), HISTORY THAT NEVER HAPPENED: A
- TREATISE ON THE QUESTION, WHAT WOULD HAVE HAPPENED IF--? (McFarland 93)
- C: Arguments for and against counterfactual history. Chapter 5 is titled
- "Examples" and includes a synopsis of Toynbee's "If Alexander...".
- T: German UNGESCHEHENE GESCHICHTE: EIN TRAKTAT UBER DIE FRAGE, WAS WARE
- GESCHEHEN, WENN--?
- Edwards, Michael J., & Brian Stableford, "Time Paradoxes", in <ESF2>; rev. of
- Edwards's article in <ESF1>
- C: Encyclopedia entry citing various titles.
- Fadness, Fern Bryant, "What If Booth's Bullet Had Missed Lincoln?", in THE
- PEOPLE'S ALMANAC #2 (eds Wallechinsky & Wallace) (Morrow 78; Bantam 78)
- C: Synopsis of Waldman's "If Booth had Missed Lincoln".
- --------------------, "What If Napoleon Had Won at Waterloo?", in THE
- PEOPLE'S ALMANAC #2 (eds Wallechinsky & Wallace) (Morrow 78; Bantam 78)
- C: Synopsis of Trevelyan's "If Napoleon had Won the Battle of Waterloo".
- --------------------, "What If the British Had Won the Revolutionary War?",
- in THE PEOPLE'S ALMANAC #2 (eds Wallechinsky & Wallace) (Morrow 78; Bantam
- 78)
- C: Synopsis of Sobel's FOR WANT OF A NAIL...; IF BURGOYNE HAD WON AT
- SARATOGA.
- --------------------, "What If the South Had Won the Civil War?", in THE
- PEOPLE'S ALMANAC #2 (eds Wallechinsky & Wallace) (Morrow 78; Bantam 78)
- C: Synopsis of Kantor's IF THE SOUTH HAD WON THE CIVIL WAR.
- Hacker, Barton C., & Gordon B. Chamberlain, "Pasts that Might Have Been", in
- Extrapolation Winter 81
- C: Bibliography of AHs published before 1981.
- ------------------------------------------, "Pasts that Might Have Been, II:
- A Revised Bibliography of Alternative History", in <AH>
- C: 61-page listing of AHs published before 1986, with short synopses and
- publication histories.
- Harrison, Harry, "Worlds Beside Worlds", in SCIENCE FICTION AT LARGE (ed
- Nicholls) (Gollancz 76; Harper & Row 76)
- C: On writing AH and the reasoning behind A TRANSATLANTIC TUNNEL, HURRAH!
- Leeper, Evelyn C., "Boskone XXXI", in Alternate Worlds #2 (Apr 94)
- C: Report on AH panel discussions at an sf con.
- -----------------, "A Discussion of Likely Change Points for Alternate
- Realities, Universes and Histories", in Alternate Worlds #1 (Jan 94)
- C: Report on an AH panel discussion at ConFrancisco, the 1993 WorldCon.
- McHale, Brian, POSTMODERNIST FICTION (Methuen 87)
- C: Includes short descriptions of a few AHs in chapters "Worlds in
- collision", "A world next door" and "Real, compared to what?".
- Morton, Michael, "Introduction to Sealion", in Alternate Worlds #1 (Jan 94)
- C: Scenarios for Operation Sealion, including synopses of Cox's OPERATION
- SEA LION, Longmate's IF BRITAIN HAD FALLEN and Macksey's INVASION.
- Nicholls, Peter, "Time Travel and Other Universes", in THE SCIENCE IN SCIENCE
- FICTION (Knopf 83)
- C: Includes subchapters "Alternative Universes in Science Fiction" and
- "Alternative Universes in Physics".
- Pierce, John J., "On the Edge", in GREAT THEMES OF SCIENCE FICTION: A STUDY
- IN IMAGINATION AND EVOLUTION (Greenwood 87)
- C: Subchapter "The Possibility Binders" discusses time travel, parallel
- worlds and AH stories, including some French and Japanese tales.
- Roberts, Keith, "The Peacock Dance", in Alternate Worlds #2 (Apr 94)
- C: On writing and publishing PAVANE.
- Schmunk, R.B., "Alternate History Bibliography: 1. Anthologies and Authors
- A-C", in Alternate Worlds #2 (Apr 94)
- -------------, "Alternate History Bibliography: 2. Authors D-K", in
- Alternate Worlds #3 (not yet published)
- -------------, "Alternate History Bibliography: 3. Authors L-R", in
- Alternate Worlds #4 (not yet published)
- -------------, "Alternate History Bibliography: 4. Authors S-Z", in
- Alternate Worlds #5 (not yet published)
- C: Reprints this bibliography for items published before 1994.
- Schmunk, R.B., "Alternate History Round-Up: 1993", in Alternate Worlds #2
- (Apr 94)
- C: Discussion of AH fiction published during 1993.
- Schmunk, R.B., & Evelyn C. Leeper, "The Year It Might Have Been: An
- Alternate History Divergence List", in Alternate Worlds #1 (Jan 94)
- C: Reprints appendix II of this bibliography, a list of dates on which 700
- AH stories diverge from our own history.
- Shetterly, Will, "The Captain's Story", in Captain Confederacy (vol 2) #1
- C: How Captain Confederacy comics came to be.
- Shippey, Tom, & Brian Stableford, "History in SF", in <ESF2>; rev. of
- Shippey's article in <ESF1>
- C: Encyclopedia entry which includes citation of a few AH titles.
- Stableford, Brian, "Alternate Worlds", in <ESF2>; rev. of article in <ESF1>
- -----------------, "Parallel Worlds", in <ESF2>; rev. of article in <ESF1>
- C: Encyclopedia entries citing various titles.
- -----------------, "An Introduction to Alternate Worlds", in Alternate Worlds
- #1 (Jan 94)
- C: A much expanded version of his "Alternate Worlds" essay in <ESF2>, in
- conjunction with the inaugural issue of Alternate Worlds magazine.
- Stableford, Brian, "A Note on Alternate History", in Extrapolation Winter 80
- C: Discussion of Disraeli's "Of a History of Events Which Have Not
- Happened".
-
-
-
- --
- R.B. Schmunk
- Email: pcrxs@valinor.giss.nasa.gov
- Smail: NASA/Goddard Institute, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025 USA
- Vox: 212-678-5637
-