Topic

Alternate History

Past is prologue. There are so many spots in history where a small change would evidently create a very different outcome. Historians call them counterfactuals and extrapolate how society might have differed. Science fiction writers populate that different world with characters and tell a story.

Alternate History

Four Score and Seven Years of the End of America: A Bibliography

* Harry Truman: We Dropped the Bomb, by Nathaniel P. Perkins, 1953. * I Like Ike: We Lead in War and Peace, by L. Christian Berrios, 1961. * The Patterson-Gimlin Film: Is Bigfoot Real?, by Roger Roberts, 1967. * Jack Takes Us to the Moon: The Apex of America, by Johnson…

by Larry Hodges

Alternate History

Date and Time

Lady Jane Grey sits across from me, studying the menu. This is the last time I let Aunt Margie talk me into a blind date. We've already exhausted the standard small talk. Where do you live? Me: Chaska. Her: the Tower of London. What do you do for a living? Me: freelance graphic…

by Susan Taitel

Alternate History

Once Upon an Alternate Universe

********Editor's Note: Adult language********* A dosckside bar in Liverpool, 1970-something. A steel worker named Osbourne has come from Birmingham looking for work and steps in for a pint. He sits next to a soused dock hand by name of Lennon. No words are shared but they do…

by Yorgo Lee Douramacos

Alternate History

Small Worlds of Black and White

The women I've loved are all decades dead. Myrna Loy in The Thin Man movies, of course, wise cracking and elegant, and Katherine Hepburn in Stage Door with her unforgettable voice, and the sad and cynical Bette Davis in All About Eve. Everyone moving through their stories with…

by James Van Pelt

Alternate History

Cherry Ripe

By the time of his inauguration in 1789, thanks to the curse of cherry tree kraneiai, George Washington had only one tooth left in his mouth. When he had chopped at the tree as a child, the resident fairy laid a spell on him that everything of the cherry would act against him.…

by Lynne Lumsden Green

Alternate History

The Two Elizabeths

"So, what are you reading these days?" he asked, as we sat down for lunch under the portrait of Henry XVIII. It was an easy question, but I paused a little to think. It was always best to think when you were meeting with Guillermo Smith-Rodriguez--head of the department and my…

by Philip Apps

Alternate History

Remarks of Councelor Pierre Aubin, Session of the Noble Councel, May 28th, Year of Our Lord 2017

Welcome everyone. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Secretary, Knight-Senators, honored warfighters, fellow citizens. Before I begin with my opening remarks, I would like to lead everybody in the pledge of allegiance. "I pledge allegiance, to the flag, of the United States of Vespuccia. And to…

by Thomas Carey White

Alternate History

Illegal Entry

The child was alone, sent by parents desperate to save their son before tragedy struck. Wrapped in cloth, placed not in a basket in a river, but in an escape vessel large enough for only one. A refugee from an impending crisis that inevitably would lead to the destruction of the…

by Clayton Hackett

Alternate History

Past Mistake

Georg waited patiently in the Tiergarten, the park within central Berlin, hidden in a copse of maple and plane trees close to the zoo. It was the first of February 1933 and he felt a pang of excitement and fear comingled. Soon their plan would reach fruition but for now the most…

by S W Whitehouse

Alternate History

Cursed Timeline

"Butterfly affect, my ass!" Announced Mark, one hand clutched to his wobbly beer jug, the other to the table for balance. "Effect," I corrected. "Who cares. What I'm saying is that there's almost no difference between changing things now, in the real world, or through your…

by Xavier Lastra Martinez

Alternate History

The Partisan

"You weren't there, you don't understand!" My wife screams at me from the bed. Her forehead is a war torn map of trenches when her brow furrows. "You don't know what it was like to run, to hide. The German checkpoints. Vous ne savez pas! Ils etaient des monstres! You don't…

by Rebecca Ann Hodgkins

Alternate History

An Historic Rejection

I suppose writers are like gamblers or fishermen, we loudly celebrate our triumphs and conveniently bury the failures. I'd made a point of mentioning a rare bit of success to an elderly neighbor of mine, who also fancied himself a writer. A popular science fiction website had…

by Mark Brian Thomas

Alternate History

Submission to The Board of Censors, Department of Official History, Washington DC.

Submitted material: Movie Review The Post (2018) The Post is a fascinating look at a little-known period of US history. Of course, the treasonous actions of the now defunct New York Times during the critical period of the Patriotic War of Vietnamese Freedom have been well…

by K. S. O'Neill

Alternate History

In the Minotaur's Labyrinth

Aristedes killed the beast. He had survived longer than his other sacrificial comrades--the minotaur's meals-- survived long enough to grow used to the labyrinth's darkness. His nose and ears were now his world. So, when he heard the monster's soft grunts and inhaled its awful…

by Will Shadbolt

Alternate History

Universal Reality

Jovak leaned back in his chair. The coding changes were complete, the beta testing had detected no faults, and with this one last keystroke, implementation would begin. It was a drastic change to the software but it would prove the versatility of the test subjects. He stretched…

by Michael Allen Lane

Alternate History

In Our Country

In our country, when a boy reaches the age of puberty, he is blindfolded so that he will not be tempted by the sight of women. This law is neither unreasonable nor unduly onerous. Boys and men are permitted to go without eye-covering amongst family members within the confines of…

by Jessie Seigel

Alternate History

Say "Cheese!"

"Let us go to the place," said Nardoo excitedly. "It is time for us to live forever." The tribe were well-daubed, clad in their finest furs and bearing their best weapons. This day was important to them above all others, the third day after the salmon spawned. They trooped out…

by John Francis Keane

Alternate History

Strange Loop

The world ended the way it always did (US dictator, WWIII), pretty much (clowns, Central Park), on a Tuesday. This time I was born in Minnesota, which seemed familiar (snow, Lutherans) but different ("you betcha"). My parents weren't quite the same, but close: my mom was a CNA…

by S. DeFreitas Timmons

Alternate History

Tusks, Trunks, and Time Travel

Gaius Scatulus stood with the rest of his legion. The Roman soldiers waited calmly for the enemy to make himself known. This man, Pyrrhus, had come to take their homes, their freedoms, the very city of Rome from them. He had come to make himself their king. Gaius was not a…

by Zachary Morgan Brett

Alternate History

They Have Been at a Great Feast of Languages, and Stol'n the Scraps

Stop. I know you think this is a fiction. But this isn't. I have written a story. But if you are reading these words, these very words, then that isn't what you have in front of you. I know I'm not making myself clear. Let me explain. If I can. I'm not even sure where to start.…

by Robert Bagnall

Alternate History

To the Editors of The Matriarch, re: Allegations of Pressganging

42nd of Autumn, 16th year of Annabelle II Regarding yr/ article of 37th of Autumn, and the ongoing judicial case around consent and "press-ganging": I have served in Her Majesty's Air Navy for two decades now, and am considered one of the foremost Captains amongst that glorious…

by Matt Dovey

Alternate History

Letters Found on the Backs of Pepper Labels next to a Skeleton in an 800-year-old Hibernation Capsule Ruptured by What Looks Like Sword Damage

So it turns out these people don't even have paper, they just write on sheep hides or something, so I have to write this amazing historical account on these pepper wrappers. This grad student named Eleanor had me get the pepper. I was going to bring beads and hand mirrors and…

by Luc Reid

Alternate History

Letters Found on the Backs of Pepper Labels next to a Skeleton in an 800-year-old Hibernation Capsule Ruptured by What Looks Like Sword Damage

So it turns out these people don't even have paper, they just write on sheep hides or something, so I have to write this amazing historical account on these pepper wrappers. This grad student named Eleanor had me get the pepper. I was going to bring beads and hand mirrors and…

by Luc Reid

Alternate History

Censored Addendum to Yoshimoto Hano's History of the Empire

Imaginary Concepts, People, and Places Hitler You've never heard of him. A bit like Anton Drexler, but shorter. Had a squeakier voice, too. Did about the same things but failed miserably. Nuclear Weapons The whole idea is that you can separate the indestructible elements of…

by Filip Wiltgren

Alternate History

The Tim Machine

"Let's ask Tim about Hitler," I said, binding a corner of the Autobot potholder for my nephew's ninth birthday. "If you're done staring at your phone, Tim." Tim looked up, blinking. "Godwin's Law?" "No. Time travel," I said, glancing around the Thursday knitting circle. "Just…

by Matt Larsen

Alternate History

A Historical Curiosity

SERBIAN FREE GAZETTE Court Clears "Mad" Murderer; Anti-Empire Fury Boils June 28, 1914, Sarajevo. Early this morning, President of the Court Luigi von Curinaldi announced that Hugh Ernst, accused mass murderer, had been cleared of criminal wrongdoing. Mr. Ernst will be confined…

by Tyler Young

Alternate History

Causes and Effects

"The future," the mathematician intoned, "is both unknown and unknowable," which seemed an interesting contention at the time, somewhere near the end of the meal, when all were pleasantly sated and ready for one of their usual debates. "There are, after all, a huge number of…

by Bud Sparhawk

Alternate History

Turning Points

Beynon, a little known Near Space historian, found himself thinking about Winston Churchill as he transferred into Jovian orbit. Churchill, ignoring his advisers, had flown 18 hours from a meeting with the U.S. president in Bermuda back to England during the height of the Second…

by Philip A Berry

Alternate History

Miranda, Joe, and the Little Green Man

Miranda waddled into our cabin, something green and many-limbed squirming in her arms. "Dammit, Randy!" I grabbed my sidearm. "What have I told you about bringing critters into the house?" She dropped the thing on the floor and closed the door behind her. "But, Pa! This one…

by Michael Haynes

Alternate History

A Sonorous Expiration

President Abraham Lincoln stopped breathing entirely and the assembled doctors all consulted our pocket watches; it was 6:50 A.M. After several moments, the terrible silence was broken by a prolonged inspiration and a sonorous expiration. He still lived, but not for long. I rose…

by Kat Otis

Alternate History

Back in Town

Odysseus is back. Back from the wars. Back from the western edge of the world. Back from whoring with Circe. Back to murder Penelope's lover and his family. Back to take what is rightfully his.... Penelope, body and soul. The hero and his son return from the slaughter, plan new…

by David Soyka

Alternate History

Changing the Past

29th-century Texas, like much of the rest of the world, was hot, dry, and windy. Sool, son of Menk, stood outside the National Research Arena, in dusty air that smelled of boiled cabbage, his cloak wrapped tightly around him. Three white-robed elders stood with him. The setting…

by Barton Paul Levenson

Alternate History

The Rememberists

Ansel Matthews poured cream into his coffee and watched as entropy curled black and white to brown. He enjoyed tracking the delicate whorls of liquid as they folded in upon one another, but he would not remember this. It was too mundane an event to retain specifics. There was…

by Thomas A. Mays

Alternate History

Casket Girls

She was one of the many, les filles � les caissettes, named for the little sea chests they had been allowed for their voyage. Casquettes, as some on the river later mispronounced it, as if they had all worn little caps--although some of them did. Some of them were orphans and…

by James S. Dorr

Alternate History

One Imperial Ruble

Volodya April 23, 1879. I just turned nine. That evening, I sat on a wooden zavalinka outside my house. Mosquitoes bit me all over, even through my pants and thick shirt. They could be vicious in East Russia, but I was too busy to pay attention. A light touch on my shoulder made…

by mark budman

Alternate History

Foundering Fathers

"Soames, you haven't by any chance solved those fourth-dimensional differential equations of yours, have you?" My valet's face remained impassive, but I had learned by now to read his eyes, which most would term "steady" with perhaps a touch of "stern," and they told me a sad…

by Brian K Lowe

Alternate History

Double Exposure

He hefted the handgun up and down in his palm. It felt very heavy and solid. What was it the man in the gun store said just a minute ago? "This will provide excellent self-protection." "More like self-destruction," he thought as sat behind the steering wheel. He closed his eyes…

by Lou Antonelli

Alternate History

Great White Ship

***There is swearing in this story. -Editor's Warning*** I was poking at my drink with a swizzle stick, killing time waiting for my connecting flight. The American Airlines Admiral's Club was nearly empty. I stared at the D/FW runways and watched the flights taking off and…

by Lou Antonelli

Alternate History

The Stoker Memorandum

Abraham Stoker's Journal --From the archives of the Bureau of Secret Intelligence, Pall Mall, London, Classified Ultra, for Head of Bureau Eyes Only-- Bucharest I had finally arrived, with darkness gathering, casting upon the city a most unfavorable appearance. Having checked…

by Lavie Tidhar

Alternate History

HETERO3

The mutation probably arose in the twelfth century, almost certainly in northern Italy. Several generations later, a Venetian trader married the local beauty, both most likely endowed with the copy of the young gene. Their son might have been the first human who felt the full…

by Robert Reed

Alternate History

Never the Twain

Undated journal and loose pages of manuscript found beneath the floorboards of The Daily Confederation, formerly McConnell's Printing Shop, Montgomery, Alabama, CSA, 1885. Dear Livy, I am writing you this letter though I have no idea when, or if, or how it shall ever find you.…

by Lon Prater

Alternate History

Addendum to the Confessions of St Augustine of Hippo

"There is not much time left." Augustine turned to me, his body silhouetted against the fires that were beginning to burn in the outskirts of the city. "What did you say?" "I said, there is not much time left." The old man nodded slowly and sat down by the window. "I wrote once…

by Edoardo Albert