Manassas, Again by
Gregory Benford. A boy is caught up in a war between humans and rebel mechs
(robots) against a very different historical background.
Dance Band on the
Titanic by Jack L. Chalker. A sailor gets a job on a very mysterious ferry,
which travels to places not found on maps and contains a remarkable variety of
people, many of whom seem not to recognise each other's presence.
Bring the Jubilee
by Ward More. I read this long story a couple of years ago and reviewed it on
this blog in January 2012, so I didn't read it again.
Eutopia by Poul
Anderson. This is the other story in this collection that I had previously
read, but so long ago that I didn't remember much about it (except for the
punchline, unfortunately!). The key is a different world in which Alexander the
Great had lived to an old age, establishing a Hellenic Empire which survived to
the present day, developing advanced science including the ability to travel
between alternative worlds. A Hellene exploring one of these worlds flees the
wrath of a local ruler in an alternative America, having unwittingly broken a
local taboo.
The Undiscovered
by William Sanders. Told from the viewpoint of a native American at the time of
the first European settlements, this world differs from history in that William
Shakespeare is accidently transported to America and is captured by the
natives, who he tries to impress by writing a play for them. Carefully
researched, and simultaneously funny and sad.
Mozart in Mirrorshades
by Bruce Sterling and Lewis Shiner. A nightmare scenario in which travellers to
alternate worlds are only interested in pillaging anything of value and
couldn't care less about their impact on the locals. One such visit is to
Vienna when Mozart is a lad, with unexpected consequences.
The Death of Captain
Future by Allen Steele. A spaceship crewman down on his luck is forced to
work with a captain lost in a fantasy that he is the Captain Future of old
comic-book fame, but the situation changes when they investigate a distress
call. Not obviously an alternative history story.
Moon of Ice by
Brad Linaweaver. A story that starts with the state funeral of Hitler in 1965
is obviously in the "Nazis won World War 2" camp, in this case by
being the first to develop the atomic bomb. What happens next is seen through
the eyes of Joseph Goebbels as he becomes caught up with the very different
agendas of his rebellious daughter and fanatical son.
Taking both parts of my review together, this is a difficult
group to pick favourites from. If I was giving out an award for story quality
it would go to Kim Stanley Robinson's tale, which I think would appeal just as
much to non-SF fans. Niven's brief story is perfectly crafted and Poul Anderson
is a great story-teller, while Chalker's mysterious scenario has a strong
appeal to me. They are all worth reading, however.
1 comment:
Anthony,
Sounds like a great collection--got some of my "must read" authors in it: Benford and Kim Stanley Robinson and I haven't read either of their tales. I have read several though: Ward Moore's of course, Chalker and maybe the ones by Lineweaver, Sterling, and Anderson.
I'm going to look around for it.
Thanks for bringing it to my attention.
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