Making History: Classic Alternate History Stories by Rick Wilber

Making History: Classic Alternate History Stories by Rick Wilber

Author:Rick Wilber [Wilber, Rick]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Fiction, Alternative History
ISBN: 9781640193598
Publisher: New Word City, Inc.
Published: 2019-03-04T13:00:00+00:00


Publishers Weekly has called Harry Turtledove “The Master of Alternate History,” and he has been the dominant figure in the field for many years. He has won a Hugo Award, three Sidewise Awards for Best Alternate History, and is a frequent nominee for these awards and others. He has written dozens of novels and stories exploring alternate histories of Rome, the American Civil War, World War II, the Korean War, and many more. His novel The House of Daniel displays Turtledove’s love of baseball as he describes the alternate history of a somewhat odd barnstorming baseball team. In this story, we meet an alternate version of the Sultan of Swat as he talks to H. L. Mencken about baseball and what might have been if only things had gone a little differently.

Puffing slightly, Henry Louis Mencken paused outside of George’s Restaurant. He’d walked a little more than a mile from the red-brick house on Hollins Street to the corner of Eutaw and Lombard. Along with masonry, walking was the only kind of exercise he cared for. Tennis and golf and other so-called diversions were to him nothing but a waste of time. He wished his wind were better, but he’d turned sixty the summer before. He carried more weight than he had as a younger man. Most of the parts still worked most of the time. At his age, who could hope for better than that?

He chuckled as his gloved hand fell toward the latch. Every tavern in Baltimore seemed to style itself a restaurant. Maybe that was the Germanic influence. A proud German himself, Mencken wouldn’t have been surprised.

His breath smoked. It was cold out here this February afternoon. The chuckle cut off abruptly. Because he was a proud German, he’d severed his ties with the Sunpapers a couple of weeks before, just as he had back in 1915. Like Wilson a generation before him, Roosevelt II was bound and determined to bring the United States into a stupid war on England’s side. Mencken had spent his working life taking swipes at idiots in America. Somehow, they always ended up running the country just when you most wished they wouldn’t.

The odors of beer and hot meat and tobacco smoke greeted him when he stepped inside. Mencken nodded happily as he pulled a cigar from an inside pocket of his overcoat and got it going. You could walk into a tavern in Berlin or Hong Kong or Rio de Janeiro or San Francisco and it would smell the same way. Some things didn’t, and shouldn’t, change.

“Hey, buddy! How ya doin’?” called the big man behind the bar. He had to go six-two, maybe six-three, and at least two hundred fifty pounds. He had a moon face, a wide mouth, a broad, flat nose, and a thick shock of dark brown hair just starting to go gray: he was about fifteen years younger than the journalist. He never remembered Mencken’s name, though Mencken was a regular. But, as far as Mencken could see, the big man never remembered anybody’s name.



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