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Path: bloom-beacon.mit.edu!hookup!decwrl!ames!newsfeed.gsfc.nasa.gov!osiris.giss.nasa.gov!valinor.giss.nasa.gov!not-for-mail
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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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