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A Brief Summary of the Alternate History Genre in Hungary

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Guest post by Pintér Bence.

What if the Nazis had won the Second World War? What if the Confederacy had taken over the Union? Tempting questions – with thousand and one answers. These are  the most popular periods in English alternate history novels from Philip K. Dick to Robert Harris, let alone the enormous bibliography of Harry Turtledove. I can’t deny that these events were real turning points of recent history. A fascist Britain? A communist America? These can be very exciting topics, even for a Hungarian. But what can I say? I’m bored of these books. There are so many other fields of history. So what about Hungary? Are we interested in other topics?

In Hungary, we have very few novels in the genre. Exactly: seven, and I’m counting the one I co-authored. Not a popular genre, you may say, but hell, we just rediscovered the whole detective fiction with Kondor Vilmos’s brilliant Budapest-novels. The lack of this genre is more surprising when you learn about our miserable history: Hungarians are constantly whining about how fate or God screwed us throughout history. It would be logical, though, to have a flourishing alternate history subculture. We don't have it, however, unless you count the often antisemitic conspiracy theorists or the believers of Sumer/Japanese/Tibetan/Korean/Syrian ancestry.

Three of the seven Hungarian AH-novels deal with the utterly boring question of what-if-the-Nazis-had-won-the-war. Gáspár László wrote the Mi, I. Adolf (We, Adolf I), a novel about the prosperous post-war German empire. In the A negyedik birodalom (The Fourth Reich) by Galántai Zoltán (W. Hamilton Green) the space-conquering Nazis have to fight an alien enemy. And lastly Trenka Csaba Gábor’s Egyenlítői Magyar Afrika (Hungarian Equatorial Africa) takes us to a Hungarian colony in Africa and shows us the end of the Nazi regime through the eyes of a young colonist.

The three other novels deal with the Ottoman and Soviet conquerors of the country. In the Ezüst félhold Blues (Silver Crescent Blues) Gáspár András examine a world where the Ottomans have never been defeated and Hungary is still a Turkish territory in the 20th century. Trenka Csaba Gábor’s fresh novel, Place Rimbaud takes a similar approach and shows us a contemporary Hungary dominated by the Ottomans and a world dominated by France. In László Zoltán’s novel Hiperballada (Hyperballad) computer technology developed faster in the Soviet Union, and Hungary is still on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain.

But I have always thought Hungary and Central Europe have far more exciting opportunities than these. What if St. Stephen, the founder of Hungary lost the decisive battle against the pretender Koppány? What if Matthias Corvinus had had a rightful, powerful heir who could have organized the army and could have brought in some international help against the Ottomans in 1526 at Mohács? What if John Sobieski of Poland had not honored his obligations in 1683, and the Ottomans could have taken over Vienna? And what if the Hungarian rebels had defeated the Habsburg armies at some point in the freedom fight in 1848 or 1849?

This last one is my favorite question, which I examined with my co-author Pintér Máté in the novel A szivarhajó utolsó útja (The Last Journey of the Cigar Ship). Our divergence point is in 1848, when an engineer invents a Gatling-gun-like weapon in Munkács, Hungary. With the help of this “Wunderwaffe” the Hungarian army can stop the intervening Russians at the Dukla Pass and later they can occupy Vienna. As a result of this the Habsburg Empire’s minorities join the rebellion and  they form the Danubian Confederation together. In the next decade Poland and most of the Balkans are liberated, Italy and North Germany are unified with the help of the Danubian Confederation. In 1860, the Confederation has eleven members: Bavaria (with Baden and Württemberg), Austria, Hungary (with Slovakia), Bohemia, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Romania, Bosnia, Transylvania and Bulgaria.
In 1888, the Danubian Confederation and the allied countries (Italy, the North German Federation and Poland) are threatened by the neighboring powers: the Russian Tsar, the French Emperor and the Turkish Sultan are just waiting for a proper reason to start a war. While the external threat is increasing, a mysterious villain, Árny (Shade) is preparing to steal the first battle airship in order to bring the country to anarchy. Only a few people could bring the situation under control: Kossuth Csaba, a young cavalry officer, grandson of Kossuth Lajos, the founder of the state; Ana Pejnovic, the beautiful Serbian agent of the Secret Service and Nemesházi Bence, a dynamic politician of the Danubian Civic Democratic Party.

So this is the situation in Hungary. Few books, half of them about the Nazis, yet endless opportunities in our history.

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Pintér Bence is a journalist at the Hungarian online newspaper mandiner.hu and the co-author of the alternate history novel A szivarhajó utolsó útja. He studies 19th century diplomatic relations at the Eötvös Lóránd University. You can follow him on Tumblr.

Weekly Update #116

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Editor's Note

If you haven't already seen it, go check out author Pintér Bence excellent overview of the alternate history genre in Hungary. This is the first, of what I hope to be many, glimpses into alternate history outside of the English-speaking world. Again, if you would like to submit an article about your nation's coverage of our favorite genre or just shoot me some resources so I can write the article, hit me up at ahwupdate at gmail dot com. I am already working on an article on Israel although there are probably people who read this blog who are much more knowledgeable about their alternate history than I am.

In other news I am taking some short time off from blogging this week (most likely just Wednesday and Thursday) to a) work on my own fiction and b) finally mail out the prizes for previous contest winners that have been sitting on my desk. Sorry for the delays guys, I do feel ashamed about this, but things are about to change.

And now the news...

Will North Colorado Vote to Secede?

If you thought state secession only happens in alternate history, think again. News that northern and more conservative counties of Colorado want to secede from their state (but not the United States) have taken the next step. Several counties have already approved a 51st state initiative on November's ballot and more are expected to in the future.

As said before, creating a state out of an existing state is ridiculously hard. North Colorado would need both the approval of Colorado (controlled by the same liberals the conservative counties are trying to get away from) and the United States Congress (which hasn't had much of track record of doing anything recently). Michael J. Trinklein of Lost States, however, did suggest that the new red state (which he called "High Plains") could be allowed into the Union the same time as Puerto Rico, thus keeping a balance (much like the Missouri Compromise) and make Colorado more blue. He expanded on these ideas in an article posted yesterday on Time.

Geeze, this is the most I ever talked about politics. Lets now talk about a computer game.

War of the Vikings Draws First Blood in Alpha
Paradox invited select players to try their upcoming title, War of the Vikings, in Closed Alpha Testing before the game is released to the public next year. Developed by Fatshark, War of the Vikings is built upon the same skill-driven close combat gameplay that powers War of the Roses, and extends Paradox’s War series into the brutal and bloody Viking Age.

The game’s first Closed Alpha will drop players into the Pitched Arena game mode, a harsh, fast-paced battle with no respawns with victory going to the last Viking or Saxon standing. Two maps will be on display, with three character classes available to choose from, giving testers the chance to experience a wide range of available weapons, perks, and play styles. The test will last until September 1. Luckily you can still apply to join now.

The intensity is greater and the beards are longer in War of the Vikings, where players must band together on the battlefields of 9th and 10th Century England and fight to conquer or defend Britannia. Environments, weapons, and visuals drawn from Viking Age history will immerse players in a bloody new conflict between the Vikings and the Saxons, with each warrior hand-designed by its player from a wide variety of customization options. Built on skill-driven gameplay and a deep combat system, War of the Vikings will bring close combat closer than ever.

LoneStarCon is Almost Here!

LoneStarCon 3, the 71st World Science Fiction Convention ("Worldcon"), begins this Thursday so there is a lot of news to cover. Organizers have released their fifth and final Progress Report (PR5).  This Progress Report has been published in electronic format only, and can be found on the LoneStarCon 3 website. Progress Report 5 brings members up to date with the latest plans for events, exhibits, and programming including the world premiere of Lakeside, a documentary featuring Sidewise-nominated author Jay Lake; Dr Who and the history of Worldcon and the Hugo Awards.

Progress Report 5 also includes a range of information designed to help members make the most of their time in San Antonio, including travel guidance and tourism recommendations, as well as a confirmation of opening hours for all convention areas and amenities.

Meanwhile, the 2013 Hugo Award Ceremony will be broadcast live around the world when the event takes place in San Antonio on Sunday. LoneStarCon 3 has partnered with Ustream to provide this exclusive, ad-free broadcast, enabling science fiction fans around the world to participate in this prestigious event.

The ceremony will be held in the Grand Ballroom of the Marriott Rivercenter hotel in downtown San Antonio, starting at 8 p.m. Central Time (9 p.m. Eastern, 6 p.m. Pacific). The evening will be hosted by LoneStarCon 3 Toastmaster Paul Cornell, himself a Hugo Award winner and multiple Hugo Award nominee.

In addition, the official Hugo Awards site will provide live text coverage via CoverItLive. As in previous years, the CoverItLive broadcast will be hosted by former Worldcon Co-Chairman Kevin Standlee and two-time Campbell Award Nominee Mur Lafferty.

Of course, we here at The Update are most excited about this year's Sidewise Awards which will be presented this Saturday at noon. Can't wait!

Calendar

August 31: Last day to fund the TINKER Steampunk Web Series Pilot by Containment Field Studio Kickstarter.

September 14: Last day of the Weird Science Exhibit in Middletown, CT.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

The Alternate History Challenge in World Building by Teramis at World Building Academy.
Are you a publisher trying to flog an alternate history novel? Read this! by Moe Lane.
Book Cover Smackdown – RGB Edition! ANNO DRACULA: JOHNNY ALUCARD vs. ALL IS FAIR vs. DON’T GO CHASING WATERFALLS at SF Signal.
Daedalus acknowledgements by Michael J. Martinez.
On playing with, and occasionally breaking, history by Michael J. Martinez at Anne Lyle's site.
Steampunk: Slowly Running Out of Steam? by Viktor Juhász at SFmag.
TOC: ‘Fiction River: Time Streams’ Edited by Dean Wesley Smith and Kristine Kathryn Rusch at SF Signal.
The Weird, Weird West by Maeve Alpin at Steamed!

Counterfactual History

Another One From the Archives: Heinrich Class's Pan-German Fantasy by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
What if the Wolves Had Drafted Steph Curry? by Eric in Madison at SB Nation.
Whatever Happened To Nirvana? by Keith Spillett at The Tyranny of Tradition.

Films

Russian Filmmaker Wants Steampunk Cartoon Nominated for Oscar at Rianovosti.

Games

Guns of Icarus Online blasting onto PS4 by Ozzie Mejia at Shack News.
Indie MMO Equilibrium Announced, Slated to Kickstart this Fall by chanelluo at MMOSite.
The Order: 1886 is not steampunk, Ready at Dawn boss says by Jessica Conditt at Joystiq.
Retro Steampunk Shoot ‘em Up Heading To 3DS by Spencer at Siliconera.
Steel Empire, A Steampunk Shooter For Genesis, Is Getting A Makeover For 3DS by Spencer at Siliconera.

Reviews

1945 by Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen at Amazing Stories.
Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis at the Little Red Reviewer.
Christian Nation by Frederic C. Rich at Red State.
Justice League – The Flashpoint Paradox at SF Signal.
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld at USA Today.
Milkweed Triptych by Ian Tregellis at Barnes and Noble Review.
Picking up Plans in Palma by Matthew W. Quinn at Korsgaard's Commentary.
Star Trek / Doctor Who: Assimilation² at Amazing Stories.
The Violent Century by Lavie Tidhar at Glen Mehn.

Television

Adventist Web series depicting ‘The Great Controversy’ wins ‘Geekie Award’ at Adventist News Network.
Tinker the Web Series Enters its Final Two Weeks of Crowdfunding at Newswire.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

New Releases 8/27/13

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Paperbacks

1635: Papal Stakes by Eric Flint and Charles E. Gannon

Description from Amazon.

A new addition to the multiple New York Times best-selling Ring of Fire series. After carving a place for itself in war-torn 17th century Europe, citizens of the modern town of Grantville, West Virginia take on the Borgias and Papal succession shenanigans that could undermine a Spring of freedom that has come to Europe three centuries early.

#15 in the multiple bestselling Ring of Fire Series.

It’s springtime in the Eternal City, 1635. But it’s no Roman holiday for uptimer Frank Stone and his pregnant downtime wife, Giovanna. They’re in the clutches of would-be Pope Cardinal Borgia, with the real Pope–Urban VII –on the run with the renegade embassy of uptime Ambassador Sharon Nichols and her swashbuckling downtime husband, Ruy Sanchez de Casador y Ortiz. Up to their necks in papal assassins, power politics, murder, and mayhem, the uptimers and their spouses need help and they need it quickly.

Special rescue teams–including Harry Lefferts and his infamous Wrecking Crew–converge on Rome to extract Frank and Gia. And an uptime airplane is on its way to spirit the Pope to safety before Borja’s assassins can find him. It seems that everything is going to work out just fine in sunny Italy.

Until, that is, everything goes wrong. Now, whether they are prisoners in Rome or renegades protecting a pope on the run, it’s up to the rough and ready can-do attitude of Grantville natives to once again escape the clutches of aristocratic skullduggery and ring in freedom for a war-torn land.

Age of Godpunk: Collecting Age of Anansi, Age of Satan and Age of Gaia by James Lovegrove

Description from Amazon.

James Lovegrove presents three novellas with three different 'gods' and their appreance in the worlds of man. Age of Anansi, Age of Satan, and a third novella Age of Gaia appearing both in print and ebook for the first time with the release of this exciting omnibus.

James Lovegrove presents three novellas with three different 'gods' and their appreance in the worlds of man. Age of Anansi, Age of Satan, and a third novella, Age of Gaia, appearing both in print and ebook for the first time with the release of this exciting omnibus.

Doorways to Extra Time edited by Trisha Wooldridge

Description from Amazon.

In our busy world of meetings and microwaves, car radios and cellphones, people always wish they could get an extra hour in the day. But what if they could? Doorways to Extra Time is an anthology that explores ways to get extra time (be it an hour, a day, or a decade) and the impact it would have--whether upon a single life, a family or an entire world.

Sherlock Holmes - The Stuff of Nightmares by James Lovegrove

Description from Amazon.

It's the autumn of 1890, and a spate of bombings has hit London. The newspapers are full of fevered speculation about anarchists, anti-monarchists and Fenians. But one man suspects an even more sinister hand behind the violence.  Sherlock Holmes believes Professor Moriarty is orchestrating a nationwide campaign of terror, but to what end? At the same time, a bizarrely garbed figure has been spotted on the rooftops and in the grimy back alleys of the capital.  He moves with the extraordinary agility of a latter-day Spring-heeled Jack.  He possesses weaponry and armour of unprecedented sophistication.  He is known only by the name Baron Cauchemar, and he appears to be a scourge of crime and villainy. But is this masked man truly the force for good that he seems?  Is he connected somehow to the bombings?  Holmes and his faithful companion Dr. Watson are about to embark on one of their strangest and most exhilarating adventures yet.

SideQuest Adventures by Mark Teppo, Angus Trim, Michael Tinker Pearce and Linda Pearce

Description from Amazon.

Three exciting stand-alone SideQuest adventures set in the alternate history world of the popular Foreworld Saga, collected in a single volume.

The Beast of Calatrava, by Mark Teppo, is an intriguing alternate history tale in which both a battle-scarred former knight with a blood-soaked history and a monk with a mysterious past face the encroaching Templar crusade and the war coming to Iberia.

In The Shield Maiden, by Michael “Tinker” Pearce and Linda Pearce, a headstrong and skilled young Viking woman struggles through the stigmas of her time to claim her spot among the fiercest of fighters.

The Lion in Chains, by Angus Trim and Mark Teppo, is a visionary adventure in which the legendary Robin Hood joins forces with a clandestine order of warrior monks to rescue the kidnapped King Richard the Lionheart.

Audiobooks

Hearts of Iron by Scott James Magner

Description from Amazon.

When The Italian Job meets the Knights of the Round Table, the ultimate medieval heist caper is born.

It is the summer of 1035 AD and three sons of Tancred de Hauteville are in ambivalent service to Guimar, Prince of Salerno. The three men, who have been trained by their father in the art of war since childhood, spend the sweltering afternoons practicing swordplay, trading barbs, and thinking of how many men they would need to take the prince's poorly fortified castle for themselves.

But when a mysterious agent asks the prince for the brothers' services in obtaining a gilded chest, eldest brother William recognizes an opportunity to strengthen the Hauteville legacy. When he assembles a crew of skilled mercenaries, loyalties are tested and truths revealed. Among the group, there is a traitor, a spy, and the carrier of a long-held secret. The trust William places in each of his men will decide the future for himself and his family.

A bold new SideQuest in the Foreworld Saga, HEARTS OF IRON shows a different side of the middle ages , but with all the deft-sword play, historical accuracy, and political intrigue you would expect from the series that brought you The Mongoliad trilogy.

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is you story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Paradox Interactive Offers Games for Charity with Humble Bundle

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Paradox Interactive has joined forces with the Humble Bundle, a platform that offers collections of games at pay-what-you-want prices with proceeds supporting a variety of charities. Starting today, the “Humble Weekly Sale” is available at and gives gamers a chance to set their own price for several of Paradox’s games – or even a copy of every single game in Paradox’s library on Steam. The bundle will be available until Thursday, September 5, 2013.

Gamers can set their own price for the Humble Weekly Sale, with additional rewards available at higher tiers of donation. Gamers who donate $1 or more will receive (along with the soundtracks) War of the Roses, Europa Universalis III Complete and other Paradox games. Gamers who donate less than $1 will just receive the soundtracks only to all of the above games. Gamers who donate more than the current average donation will also receive Crusader Kings II, plus another game and the soundtracks.

Any donations exceeding $125 will receive “The Big Kahuna” package: a copy of every game offered by Paradox through Steam (apart from Europa Universalis IV or DLC packages), along with soundtracks, totaling $800 in value.

This is a good way guys to help someone and get some cool games for yourself. Everyone wins!

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

2012 Sidewise Awards Announced!

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The winners of the 2012 Sidewise Awards for Alternate History have been announced!  They are as follows:

Short Form: Rick Wilber, “Something Real” (Asimov’s, 4/12)

Long Form:C. J. Sansom, Dominion (MantlePan McMillan)

Congratulations to the winners and I hope the Sidewise judges and any of the alternate historians who were there to see the presentation enjoy the rest of LoneStarCon.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Weekly Update #117

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Editor's Note

When I first started The Update I had a narrow definition of what I considered alternate history. I quickly realized this limited me on what I could discuss on a Weekly Update to the point where I was scrambling to find things to talk about and I felt I was giving too much importance to minor stories. Gradually I began to expand the definition of what The Update considered to be alternate history, which rewarded me with higher page views, while maintaining my own personal definition of alternate history. This was not much of an issue for me because as an attorney I know it is distinct possibility that I or my firm will represent a client I disagree with, but I have accepted this as part of the cost of my chosen career.

Today, The Update's definition of alternate history can be roughly summed as "speculative fiction with an appreciation for history." Yes, it is very vague and gives me a lot of room to decide what stories to bring to the forefront or what books to review. It is tempered only by the fact that I will cover only subjects I am interested in and will generally ignore things that I find boring. I have no plans to change this policy in the future, despite criticism I have received from hardcore alternate historians. I have read and understood your complaints, especially those directed at my coverage of steampunk, but I do not feel it is the best interest of The Update to return to a narrower definition. I believe it would alienate other groups of alternate historians, and trust me, despite our size we do remain a divided fandom. The Update strives to be all inclusive, but hopefully I can find a good balance so that no group feels particularly under-represented.

I like to reiterate that The Update remains a group blog. If you want to see more of what you like on The Update, please email me at ahwupdate at gmail dot com. I'm not asking just for submissions, but any comments, questions or concerns that can help me improve this blog.

And now the news...

Sidewise and Hugo Winners


In case you missed it, the Sidewise Awards for Alternate History were announced last Saturday. Click on this link to see who won. The Update even beat out the SF Site in being the first to announce the winners (God, I love Twitter). Congrats again to the winners.

In case you are interested, the Hugo Award winners were also announced. For those who don't know, the Hugo Awards are the premier award in the science fiction genre, honoring science fiction and fantasy literature, media, artists, and fans. The Hugo Awards were first presented at the 1953 World Science Fiction Convention in Philadelphia, PA (Philcon II), and they have continued to honor science fiction and fantasy notables annually for 60 years. You can see the complete list of winners at Pat's Fantasy Hotlist.

Lucius Shepard hospitalized

It sucks sometimes that something bad has to happen to someone before you can learn something interesting about them. Take author Lucius Shepard, who last week received an announcement from Ellen Datlow on his Facebook page regarding his recent online disappearance:
Hi everyone, I know you’ve all been concerned with Lucius because he hasn’t been online for awhile. The situation is this. Lucius has been in the hospital since August 5th. About a week later he had a stroke while in the hospital. He’s now in rehab. He wants everyone to know that he’s okay, that he’s working on it, and that he cannot speak well, can’t write at all, and he can just barely read. 
He cannot take or make phone calls right now.This is all the info I have. I’ll post more news if I get it.
Shepard just celebrated his 66th birthday. For those who don't know he is the winner of the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award, the World Fantasy Award, the Theodore Sturgeon Award, and the Shirley Jackson Award. He also wrote two alternate history short stories: "Dog-Eared Paperback of My Life" and the often reprinted "A Spanish Lesson", which features an American living in 1960s Spain encountering a couple who have fled from some Nazi-dominated world.

We here at The Update wish Shepard a speedy recovery.

Listen to "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" by Ian Sales

Sidewise nominated author and friend of The Update, Ian Sales, is now on audio. His short alternate history story "Adrfit on the Sea of Rains" about a group of astronauts stranded on the Moon who using a secret Nazi weapon to find a new Earth, can be listened to on StarShipSofa No 302. Ian also posted the attached glossary to the short story on his small press' website. Trust me you will find this glossary helpful because there is a lot of information packed into "Adrift".

You can also check out my review of the second story in Sale's Apollo Quartet, "The Eye with Which the Universe Beholds Itself", on Amazing Stories. Perhaps we will see an audio version of that story in the near future as well.

Calendar

September 7: Last day to fund Eleanor Xandler, Temporal Detective on Indiegogo.

September 21: Meet Telos Moorise authors at Forbidden Planet, London, UK.

October 13: Last day to see the Antipodean Steampunk Show at the Workshops Rail Museum in North Ipswich, Queensland, Australia.

October 28: The Kitschies present... Secret Histories (with Lavie Tidhar, author of Osama) at Blackwell's Charing Cross, London, UK.

January 17 to April 24, 2014: The national tour of the steampunk themed musical "The Fantasticks".

And, because I am too lazy to list all of them out, here is a list of steampunk events for the month of September that the good folks at Tor.com were nice enough to create for us.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

The Blagger's Guide To: Steampunk at The Independent.
E. Catherine Tobler Says You Got Your Steampunk In Her SciFi at SF Signal.
Exclusive Excerpt From "Sherlock Holmes: The Stuff of Nightmares" at Famous Monsters of Filmland.
The Outsider: A New Science Fiction Award by Paul Cook at Amazing Stories.
Story behind Age of Godpunk by James Lovegrove at UpComing4.Me.
Weird Science: Wormholes Make the Best Time Machines by Tariq Malik at Space.com.

Book Reviews

The Secret of Abu El Yezdi by Mark Hodder at Falcata Times.

Comics

Manifest Destiny Reveals the Secret Mission of Lewis and Clark by Leo Johnson at Geek Syndicate.

Counterfactual History

4 new states from Maryland? by Michael J. Trinklein at Lost States.
An alternate history of Michael Jackson and the black space age by Annalee Newitz at io9.
The Alternative History of an Undivided India by Zareer Masani at StandPoint.
Counterfactual Advertising: Mercedes Kills Hitler! by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual Historian.
The greatest mystery of the Inca Empire was its strange economy by Annalee Newitz at io9.
Obamacare Counterfactual: What if Romney won and delayed the ACA, indefinitely? at Josh Blackman's Blog.
What If the Jews Really Defeated Hitler? by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual Historian.
Zeppelins: the beginning of modern warfare by Iona McLaren at The Telegraph.

Films

First Teaser for the Epic Documentary About Nic Cage's Superman Lives by Charlie Jane Anders at io9.
Read the screenplay for the scrapped 2002 Batman Vs. Superman movie by Charlie Jane Anders at io9.

Interviews

Lisa Walker at Express Milwaukee.

Games

The Chaos Engine Unleashed by Cord Kruse at Inside Mac Games.
Europa Universalis IV Review: Captivating Alternate Histories by Lowell Bell at Gameranx.
Space 1889 Game Hits a Homer on Kickstarter! at Frank Chadwick's Space 1889.
Wolfenstein Feels Old, and We Like It at IGN.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

New Releases 9/3/13

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Hardcovers

The Given Sacrifice by S.M. Stirling

Description from Amazon.

Rudi Mackenzie has won the battle that expelled the enemy from the new High Kingdom of Montival. Now he must free the people who live in the state once known as Idaho from occupation by the legions of the Church Universal and Triumphant and pursue them to their lair over the mountains. There he will finally confront the forces behind the Church—the Powers of the Void.

Yet even a victory will not end the conflict forever. The Powers of the Void are malevolent and infinitely patient, and the struggle is one that involves the entire world. They threaten Rudi not only in the present, but also in the future represented by his children, Órlaith and John. Rudi knows this.

And as his heir Princess Órlaith grows up in the shadow of her famous father, she also realizes that the enemy will do anything to see that she does not live to fulfill her parents’ dream...

Paperbacks

Half a Crown by Jo Walton

Description from Amazon.

For the first time in paperback, the culminating novel of Hugo and Nebula Award-winner Jo Walton's stunning Small Change trilogy.

Following the award-winning Farthing and its sequel Ha'penny, Half a Crown is an amazing alternate-world noir tale of resistance to encroaching fascism, from the author of Among Others.

In 1941 the European war ended in the Farthing Peace, a rapprochement between Britain and Nazi Germany. The balls and banquets of Britain's upper class never faltered, while British ships ferried "undesirables" across the Channel to board the cattle cars headed east.

Peter Carmichael is commander of the Watch, Britain's distinctly British secret police. It's his job to warn the Prime Minister of treason, to arrest plotters, to discover Jews. The midnight knock of a Watchman is the most dreaded sound in the realm.

Now, in 1960, a global peace conference is convening in London, where Britain, Germany, and Japan will oversee the final partition of the world. Hitler is once again on British soil. So is the long-exiled Duke of Windsor—and the rising gangs of "British Power" streetfighters, who consider the Government "soft," may be the former king's bid to stage a coup d'etat.

Amidst all this, two of the most unlikely persons in the realm will join forces to oppose the fascists: a debutante whose greatest worry until now has been where to find the right string of pearls, and the Watch Commander himself.

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Omnibus by Alan Moore

Description from Amazon.

At last, the original two LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN epics are collected in a single volume!

In this amazingly imaginative tale, Allan Quatermain, Mina Murray, Captain Nemo, Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde, and Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man unite to defeat a deadly menace to London and all Britons!

Then, one month later, the skies over England are filled with flaming rockets as Mars launches the first salvo of an invasion. Only our stalwart adventurers can save mother England and the Earth itself.

The Mammoth Book of Time Travel SF edited by Mike Ashley

Description from Amazon.

Are the past and future immutable or can we escape the inevitable? This thought-provoking collection of time travel stories not only takes us into the past and future, but also explores what might happen if we attempt to manipulate time to our own advantage. Read 25 mindbending stories from Kage Baker, Michael Swanwick, Christopher Priest, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Robert Silverberg, Paul Levinson and many more!

Lord of Mountains by S.M. Stirling

Description from Amazon.

Rudi Mackenize, now Artos the First, High King of Montival, and his allies have won several key battles against the Church Universal and Triumphant. But still the war rages on, taking countless lives, ravaging the land once known as the United States of America. Artos and his Queen, Mathilda, must unite the realms into a single kingdom to ensure a lasting peace.

If the leaders of the Changed world are to accept Artos as their ruler, he will need to undertake a quest to the Lake at the Heart of the Mountains, and take part in a crowning ceremony—a ceremony binding him to his people, his ancestors, and his land.

Then, once he has secured his place and allegiances, Artos can go forward, and lead his forces to the heart of the enemy’s territory...

Reanimators by Peter Rawlik

Description from Amazon.

Two men, a bitter rivalry, and a quarter-century of unspeakable horrors. Herbert West’s crimes against nature are well-known to those familiar with the darkest secrets of science and resurrection. Obsessed with finding a cure for mankind’s oldest malady, death itself, he has experimented upon the living and dead, leaving behind a trail of monsters, mayhem, and madness. But the story of his greatest rival has never been told — until now. Dr. Stuart Hartwell, a colleague and contemporary of West, sets out to destroy him by uncovering the secrets of his terrible experiments, only to become what he initially despised: a reanimator of the dead. For more than twenty years, the two scientists race each other to master the mysteries of life . . . and unlife. From the grisly battlefields of the Great War to the haunted coasts of Dunwich and Innsmouth, from the halls of fabled Miskatonic University to the sinking of the Titanic, their unholy quests leave their mark upon the world — and create monsters of them both.

E-books

The Windsor Faction by D.J. Taylor

Description from Amazon.

If Wallis Simpson had not died on the operating table in December 1936, Edward VIII would not have been King of England three years later. He would have abdicated for “the woman he loves,” but now, the throne beckons. If Henry Bannister’s car had not careered off the Colombo back-road in the summer before the war, Cynthia Kirkpatrick would never have found out about The Faction.

It is autumn 1939, and everything in history is just as it was. Except, that is, for the identity of the man in Buckingham Palace and the existence of a secret organization operating at the highest levels of society and determined to derail the war effort against Nazi Germany.

From the staff of the newly founded literary magazine, Duration, hunkered down in their Bloomsbury square, and the country house parties full of renegade Tory MPs, to Tyler Kent, the Embassy cipher clerk with his sheaf of stolen presidential telegrams, the journalist Beverley Nichols deviously at work on an alternative King’s Speech, while a Lancashire lad named Rodney nervously runs errands from his Maida Vale antiques shop to the House of Commons.

The Windsor Faction is an ingenious exercise in might-have-been, which assembles a cast of real and imaginary people in a horrifyingly plausible reinvention of history.

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is you story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Preview: Alt Hist Issue 5 edited by Mark Lord

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In the interest of full disclosure, I have received a review copy of Alt Hist Issue 5 edited by Mark Lord and will be posting a review in the near future. Here is the description from Amazon:
Alt Hist Issue 5 features stories covering a variety of historical periods from the 1800s to post-War USA. This issue includes five new original works of fiction including stories about Al Capone and Italian Futurism, the aftermath of the American Civil War, the real Frankenstein, the Bridge that consumes the souls of men, and the latest instalment in a series of stories about a successful Nazi invasion of Britain. Alt Hist is the magazine of Historical Fiction and Alternate History, published twice a year by Alt Hist Press. Stories featured in Alt Hist Issue 5: 
Priya Sharma’s “After Mary” is set in the mid-1800s and is the story a scientist with dreams of greatness who lives alone in his country house with only his assistant, Isobel, and servant Myles. Then his friend comes to the house and leaves a copy of Frankenstein, which changes everything. 
“AD 1929” by Douglas W. Texter is a story describing a meeting of artistic guile and criminal muscle. This is a tale of what might have happened if the Italian Futurist F.T. Marinetti had come to America and gone to work for Al Capone. 
Meredith Miller is the author of “The Stiff Heart” which draws its title from a poem by Emily Dickinson. Meredith’s piece is a story about life under the surface, in New England in the 1870s where secrets and fears and desires sometimes refuse to behave properly. Not everyone joins in the self-satisfied complacency of this prosperous post-Civil War community. 
Micah Hyatt is the author of “The Bridge”. Throughout history men have risked their lives to achieve great feats of engineering: The pyramids of Giza. The Empire State building. The Panama canal. But those who build The Bridge risk their very souls. 
“Rotten Parchment Bonds”, the latest story in the Battalion 202 series by Jonathan Doering, features Harold Storey, a quiet man praying for a quiet life after the horror of the First World War trenches. But his prayers are cruelly crushed by the German Invasion of Britain in 1941. As a police officer he is forced to co-operate with Nazi officials and is thrown into moral turmoil by the accommodations that start to be made. But perhaps there is one good man amongst the enemy ranks?
Alt Hist Issue 5 currently has a 4.4 on Amazon and a 3.67 on Goodreads. Edi from Edi's Book Lighthouse reviewed the anthology saying " Mark Lord put together a well mix of stories which show the variety of alternate history. You get exactly what has been promised. It is a great opportunity to discover not so well known but promising alternate history authors." We will see if I will say the same thing...

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Steampunk & the Revival of Obsolete Science in Before the Chase: A Short Anthology

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Guest post by Dara Fogel.

The Victorian era (in which my Steampunk series, the GrailChase Chronicles, are set) was a time when the Industrial Revolution was just beginning to pick up steam (pardon the pun!). It was a time that treasured craftsmanship and beauty in technology, as well as functionality. It was also a time of great social upheaval brought about by the increasing spread of industrialization and growth in production, a time in which the old agricultural society was giving way to a modern, urban consumer culture. Old ways of life were dying out, and new ones were being born - much like our own era.

The newly emerging use of science and technology was still shrouded in romance, before the full establishment of assembly line anonymity.  The Victorian era saw huge advances in the belief in human capacities to better the life of the huddles masses through science and its application to industry and medicine, never mind that the reality of that era was poverty-stricken, polluted, disease-ridden and generally miserable. The zeitgeist was wildly optimistic, as it seemed there was nothing that human ingenuity could not conquer.

Steampunk is a contemporary exploration of the road not taken. It originated as a sub-genre of science fiction, which asks what if we had stuck to steam and other technologies, instead of moving into the internal combustion engine? Most Steampunk literature consists of alternate histories, usually based in the early-industrialized west, primarily Victorian England and the American Wild West. Often, Steampunk fiction focuses on steam-powered technology, or, as in the case of my own Steampunk series, on discredited scientific theories made credible.

In the GrailChase Chronicles, I not only explore the massive cultural changes, I also posit a whole new technology, based on the theory of Phlogiston, which was popular during the Victorian era, but later disproven.  In my stories, the power of phlogiston not only exists, but also is harnessed and applied to the eternal battle between good and evil.

Phlogiston was believed to be the combustible element in fire, first posited in the mid-seventeenth century by Johann Joachim Becher and famously promoted by Robert Boyle. It was later shown in the eighteenth century by Mikhail Lomonsov that the chemical reaction of fire was different than previously thought, and Phlogiston Theory was considered obsolete.

In the GrailChase Chronicles, Marquis Alessandro D'Amici, a Victorian-era technological genius and Defender of an ancient secret, has not only proven the existence of phlogiston, but has harnessed its unlimited power to create energy weapons to defeat his sworn enemies, the Bavarian Illuminati. As the combustible element in fire, it seemed to me that phlogiston would be a tremendous power source, as well as a formidable explosive. In the later books of the series (to be released late 2014), we see phlogiston used to power not only small, clever gadgets (such as the Vibralance, found in Before the Chase: An Anthology), but also for horseless vehicles, androids and weapons of mass destruction.

I tied this invented technology in with elements of secret history, based on the theories concerning the Holy Grail set forth by Biagent, Leigh and Lincoln, positing the existence of secret societies surviving the aeons, manipulating the politics of nations and battling it out for supremacy (similarly to Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code). I include a young Madame Helena Blavatsky as a major character in Book 3 of the series. Madame Blavatsky was a leader in the Theosophical Movement that swept through Europe in the latter quarter of the nineteenth century, and was considered a gifted spiritualist and brazen self-promoter. Blavatsky adds a colorful touch of historical accuracy to the series, as she was actually historically present at the places and most of the events I place her at in the story.

The GrailChase Chronicles seeks, like most Steampunk fiction, to weave together historical and social speculation with elements of good storytelling, exploring possible technologies, cultural construction and good old-fashioned adventure.

* * *

Dara Fogel is a philosopher, author and educator in the American Southwest. Check out her website at: www.province-of-the-mind.com. Her epic Steampunk series, the GrailChase Chronicles, will be released beginning in fall 2013. Before the Chase: An Anthology, a collection of three GrailChase Chronicles short stories, is available for free download at Barnes & Noble and Smashwords.

Weekly Update #118

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Editor's Note

A few days ago someone on Twitter complained about being swarmed by pop-ups when they clicked on a link to The Update. This, of course, concerned me because the last thing I wanted was for this site to have the reputation for annoying ads. However, after checking my settings and attempting several times to duplicate the problem, I have been unable to witness any pop-ups. A call to our Facebook or Twitter followers to report any issues they had with pop-ups also brought no response.

I am hoping this was an isolated incident and that the person in question had an issue with their computer involving malware that did not involve The Update. Still I want to be cautious so if you do see anything weird with the ads, let me know at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.

And now the news...

RIP: Frederik Pohl

Frederik George Pohl, Jr., a science fiction writer, editor and fan, passed away last week. The award-winning author had career spanning over 75 years, winning honors both for his writing and blogging. He was influential to several authors, including S.M. Stirling. Several eulogies have been written since his passing and you can read them at SF Signal, Amazing Stories and Centauri Dreams.

When sad events like this occur, I try to remember the passing of these greats of science fiction by looking at their impact on our favorite genre, alternate history. According to Uchronia, Pohl wrote several stories in the genre including the novel-length The Coming of the Quantum Cats, where a militaristic American regime uses crosstime technology to steal technology from other timelines. His short fiction includes "The Reunion at the Mile-High" (where the US creates a "typhus bomb" in World War II), "Target One" (where survivors of a nuclear war travel back in time to kill Einstein), "Let the Ants Try" (another time travel tale about ants from the present being brought into the far distant past), "The Deadly Mission of Phineas Snodgrass" (a satire of de Camp's Lest Darkness Fall) and "The Golden Years of Astounding".

Then there was my favorite Pohl alternate history, "Waiting for the Olympians", which I read in The Mammoth Book of Alternate Histories. Although set in the universe where Rome never fell, what really made me like this story was that it introduced me to the idea that intelligent extraterrestrials might have a damn good reason to avoid this dirty, blue ball we call home. Plus there are some humorous bits involving one character trying to explain to another character what an alternate history is. Highly recommend you check this story out.

Pohl career and wide body of work is an inspiration to us all. He will be missed.

Update: Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl by David Barnett

A few months ago I reviewed Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl by David Barnett on Amazing Stories. I really enjoyed the book and recommend you check it out, especially now that it will be released in hardcover, paperback and ebook formats over the next couple weeks. You can check out the book trailer below:
Because of the video I won't post the description here like I usually do, but you can see it over at SF Signal and check out an interview with David over at My Bookish Ways.

Update: BioShock Infinite

Want to know how the story of BioShock Infinite ends, but don't have the time to play it? Well this video is just right for you...but beware. Here be SPOILERS;
Speaking of BioShock Infinite, is it too violent?

Calendar

September 12-15: The Asylum steampunk festival in Lincoln, UK.

September 27-29: Red River, NM’s Aspencade Arts and Crafts Fair will have a steampunk theme this year.

October 15: The Harlequin Hypnosis Show at Granville Island, Canada.

November 30: Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse submission period ends.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

9 Scientific Breakthroughs That Killed Science Fiction Subgenres by Katharine Trendacosta and Charlie Jane Anders at io9.
1636 The Devil’s Opera – Snippet 45 by Eric Flint.
Afrika Reich: the audio book by Guy Saville.
Alternative History…What if women were in charge? by Alison Morton at Women Writers Women Books.
Cover Reveal: Author Lilith Saintcrow's 'The Ripper Affair' by Natalie Zutter at Bookish.
How the Steampunk movement is catching the eye of Big Tech by Antony Funnell at ABC.
The Netflix for books is here, it’s mobile, and it makes Amazon look old by Hamish McKenzie at pandodaily.
PERFIDITAS cover reveal, pub date and launch by Alison Morton.
Religion and Freedom of Choice in the Afrikanerverse by Matthew W. Quinn at Korsgaard's Commentary.
RESEARCH, RESEARCH, RESEARCH! Avoiding Cultural Appropriation in Steampunk by Balogun at Chronicles of Harriet.
TOC: ‘Wonderbook: The Illustrated Guide to Creating Imaginative Fiction’ by Jeff VanderMeer at SF Signal.
What is Steampunk? by Linda Williams The Willits News.
When Science Fiction is Not Science Fiction by Paul Cook at Amazing Stories.
Why You Can’t Travel Back in Time and Kill Hitler by Lauren Davis at io9.

Comics

Dark Horse Comics brings 'The Star Wars' to life by Matt Moore at Yahoo!
The End of an Era: How the Battle of Hastings Changed England by Lisa J. Yarde at Unusual Historicals.
Persia Blues: my graphic novel of modern Iran and ancient Persia by Dara N at Iranian.com.

Counterfactual and Real History

A Design Thinking Retrospective: How History's Biggest Mishaps Could Have Been Averted by Patricia Morizio at Huff Post.
Here's what third-century China thought about the Roman Empire by Rob Bricken at io9.
Krugman's Counterfactual by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.

Reviews

The Given Sacrifice by SM Stirling at PNC-Minnesota Bureau.
The Mammoth Book of Time Travel edited by Mike Ashby at Falcata Times.
Sherlock Holmes: The Stuff of Nightmares by James Lovegrove at More Than a Reading Journal.
Soulless by Gail Carriger at Forest Park Reads.
Total War: Rome: Destroy Carthage by David Gibbins at Falcata Times.

Films

The 2002 Batman/Superman movie wouldn't have been the worst thing ever by Rob Bricken at io9.
The guy whose Reddit thread sparked a movie deal is at it again by Meredith Woerner at io9.

Games

PAX Prime 2013: Guns of Icarus Online's new Adventure mode, features, and PS4 version by Patrick Mackey at Massively.

Interviews

George R.R. Martin at The Austin Chronicle.
Priya Sharma at Alt Hist.

Podcasts

Book List: Alternate Histories by Alex Fitch at Masters of Horror.
Dissecting Worlds Series 7, Episode 6: The Iron Council at Geek Syndicate.
Worldcon Walk-by Session #1: Keffy Kehrli, Rachael Acks, Michael J. Martinez, Karen Burnham, & Kyell Gold at The Skiffy and Fanty Show.

Television

Fil-Am actors star as Pinoy mythology gods in steampunk-themed US web series by Xianne Arcangel at GMA News Online.
Revolution - Season 2 - Press Release by Babar Suhail at Spoiler TV.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

New Releases 9/10/13

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Hardcovers

Anno Dracula: Johnny Alucard by Kim Newman

Description from Amazon.

DRACULA COMES TO NEW YORK: Kim Newman returns to one of the great bestselling vampire tales of the modern era. Considered alongside I Am Legend and Interview with theVampire as one of the stand-out vampire stories of the last century - this brand-new novel is the first in over a decade from the remarkable and influential Anno Dracula series.

Newman’s dark and impish tale begins with a single question: What if Dracula had survived his encounters with Bram Stoker’s Dr. John Seward and enslaved Victorian England?

Fallen from grace and driven from the British Empire in previous instalments, Dracula seems long gone. A relic of the past. Yet, when vampire boy Johnny Alucard descends upon America, stalking the streets of New York and Hollywood, haunting the lives of the rich and famous, from Sid and Nancy to Andy Warhol, Orson Welles, and Francis Ford Coppola, sinking his fangs ever deeper into the zeitgeist of 1980s America, it seems the past might not be dead after all.

Paperbacks

Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl by David Barnett

Description from Amazon.

Nineteenth century London is the center of a vast British Empire. Airships ply the skies and Queen Victoria presides over three-quarters of the known world—including the East Coast of America, following the failed revolution of 1775.

London might as well be a world away from Sandsend, a tiny village on the Yorkshire coast. Gideon Smith dreams of the adventure promised him by the lurid tales of Captain Lucian Trigger, the Hero of the Empire, told in Gideon’s favorite “penny dreadful.” When Gideon’s father is lost at sea in highly mysterious circumstances Gideon is convinced that supernatural forces are at work.  Deciding only Captain Lucian Trigger himself can aid him, Gideon sets off for London. On the way he rescues the mysterious mechanical girl Maria from a tumbledown house of shadows and iniquities. Together they make for London, where Gideon finally meets Captain Trigger.

But Trigger is little more than an aging fraud, providing cover for the covert activities of his lover, Dr. John Reed, a privateer and sometime agent of the British Crown. Looking for heroes but finding only frauds and crooks, it falls to Gideon to step up to the plate and attempt to save the day...but can a humble fisherman really become the true Hero of the Empire?

David Barnett's Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl is a fantastical steampunk fable set against an alternate historical backdrop: the ultimate Victoriana/steampunk mash-up!

Shades of Blue and Gray: Ghosts of the Civil War by Steve Berman

Description from Amazon.

More Americans were killed during the years 1861-1865 than any other date in history. Men shattered, women lost, families broken. In Shades of Blue and Gray, editor Steve Berman offers readers tales of the supernatural - ghost stories that range from the haunts of the battlefield to revenants on the long march home. Yank. Rebel. Both finding themselves at odds in flesh and spirit.

Khan of Mars by Stephen Blackmoore

Description from Amazon.

When erudite ape Professor Khan and rough-and-tumble cowboy Bulls-Eye Gutierrez are zapped away on a one-way trip to Mars, they are thrown into a world in chaos. Under the malevolent gaze of the Weather Witch, Princess Cyclone, our heroes face the intrigue and war raging across an alien world. Will they survive long enough for the other Centurions to build a way back home, or will they perish upon the shifting sands of the Red Planet, never to be seen again?

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is you story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new story "The Enchanted Bean" can be found in Once Upon a Clockwork Tale from Echelon Press. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Rethinking the War of 1812

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Guest post by Bill Weber.

The bicentennial of the War of 1812 provides an excellent opportunity to use alternative history to recognize the importance of a conflict that historians have labeled as both “the strangest war in our national history” and a “forgotten conflict.”  At the most basic level, Henry Adams' “had only X done Y” approach to alternative history in his classic study of the war identifies tactical and operational decisions that could have changed the outcomes of numerous battles and campaigns. He generally reserved this formulation for analyzing the performances of American and British senior officers whose performance he found wanting, often noting how their more competent opponents could have further exploited the situation. For example, Adams wrote extensively on General William Hull’s star-crossed invasion of Canada and his eventual surrender of his entire army to Maj. Gen. Isaac Brock in Detroit.  He identified a number of alternative outcomes, strongly indicating that Hull’s debacle, while tragic, was eminently avoidable.

Such events and turning points can be woven into broader scenarios based on key factors or variables that could have altered history on a broader scale.  One such factor is that the War of 1812 was very much a product of the Napoleonic wars in Europe that could have ended sooner or later than 1815.  Meanwhile, the talents of individual generals heavily shaped military operations on both sides of the Atlantic. J. P. Riley’s study of the Napoleonic wars notes, “At the end of the day, the personal qualities of the allied field commander may well be the major factor in determining the success or failure of a coalition force at an operational level.”  Juxtaposing these two factors, we can imagine a brief War of 1812 that truly was “a mere matter of marching” for the United States in conquering Canada, as well as prolonged conflict where after several years Wellington’s Invincibles strip away the Louisiana Purchase and some territories London ceded to the Americans in 1783.

Finally, alternative history also calls for looking at less plausible outcomes.  What if, London and Washington avoided going to War in 1812 by pursuing British overtures after the assassination of Spencer Perceval or even earlier by ratifying the Monroe-Pinkney Treaty of 1806?  What would the United States look like had the war been avoided and Andrew Jackson not risen to prominence?  Conversely, what if the War of 1812 had led to a direr predicament for the United States by triggering the worst aspects of democracy and military dictatorship feared by the classically minded Founding Fathers?

Of course, the utility of such excursions is not to “prove” that any or all of these alternative histories could have occurred.  As David Hackett Fischer noted: “There is nothing necessarily fallacious in fictional constructs, as long as they are properly recognized for what they are and are clearly distinguished from empirical problems . . . Fictional questions can also be heuristically useful to historians, somewhat in the manner of metaphors and analogies, for the ideas and inferences which they help to suggest.”  In this sense, alternative history can help us better appreciate what happened in the War of 1812 and why, as well as appreciate the implications that conflict had for the future of North America.

Moreover, alternative histories can help us think beyond the two established narratives of the War of 1812.  The first is Mr. Madison’s War, a tale of military ineptitude.  The second is The Second War for Independence, a sequel to 1776 featuring Andrew Jackson as a second George Washington.  Subjecting these narratives to the “stress tests” of alternative (and comparative) histories would helps us better understand this the war following its bicentennial.

* * *
                 
Bill Weber is the author of Neither Victor nor Vanquished: America in the War of 1812 (Potomac Books, 2013).

The Update Welcomes Alli Martin

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The Update would like to welcome our newest volunteer editor, Alli Martin. She will be helping out by proofing many of the guest posts we receive. Lets learn a little more about her in her own words:

Alli Martin is a writer, editor, and film lover living in Orlando, Florida.  She pursued creative writing at the University of Central Florida, where she completed a thesis collection of fiction and literary nonfiction.  She has been working for the past ten years in educational publishing, longing for an opportunity to become more involved in the alternate history community.

Since learning about steampunk in 2007, Alli has been working on short fiction in the genre and slowly hammering away at a collaborative novel with her writing partner.  She mostly writes within the Victorian period, but is also intrigued by steampunk stories set in the Far East, disealpunk, and war stories in general.

Her work appears in the steampunk anthology Dreams of Steam II: Brass and Bolts.  She talks about alternate-history perspective whenever possible as a co-host of the weekly podcast Wrong Opinions About Movies.  She can be found on Twitter as @selfwinding, discussing steampunk, film, writing, and hockey.

Weekly Update #119

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Editor's Note

I have been bad about promoting myself lately. These last two weeks I have posted a review of Stirling's The Given Sacrifice and a revised article about the dangers of crosstime travel on Amazing Stories. Also my most recent professional sale, the time-travel saga "Road Trip", is available for purchase. Check them all out, I think you will enjoy it.

So it looks like ABC is producing a show where the colonists lost the America Revolution. I am going to write a more in-depth piece about the show later this week, mostly because I want to wait for more information and it does not meet the theme of today's Weekly Update. See if you can guess the theme.

And now the news...

Update: Anno Dracula: Johnny Alucard by Kim Newman

Johnny Alucard by Kim Newman comes out this week. This is the fourth volume in Anno Dracula series (you can read my reviews on The Bloody Red Baron, "Vampire Romance" and Dracula Cha Cha Cha)  and it has been a llllooonnnggg time since we have seen a new novel-length entry in this series. Here is the description from Amazon:
DRACULA COMES TO NEW YORK: Kim Newman returns to one of the great bestselling vampire tales of the modern era. Considered alongside I Am Legend and Interview with theVampire as one of the stand-out vampire stories of the last century - this brand-new novel is the first in over a decade from the remarkable and influential Anno Dracula series. 
Newman’s dark and impish tale begins with a single question: What if Dracula had survived his encounters with Bram Stoker’s Dr. John Seward and enslaved Victorian England? 
Fallen from grace and driven from the British Empire in previous instalments, Dracula seems long gone. A relic of the past. Yet, when vampire boy Johnny Alucard descends upon America, stalking the streets of New York and Hollywood, haunting the lives of the rich and famous, from Sid and Nancy to Andy Warhol, Orson Welles, and Francis Ford Coppola, sinking his fangs ever deeper into the zeitgeist of 1980s America, it seems the past might not be dead after all.
You can read excerpt from the novel at Tor and io9, where you can also learn about Dracula from Kim himself. He also did a piece on Lit Reactor about using other people's characters in his novels. Already pre-ordered my copy, have you?

The Battle for the North Pole: Santa Vs Dracula

Speaking of Dracula...

A new mashup comic is coming from Ed Power and artist Melissa Dejesus called Santa vs Dracula. Here is the description from the press release:
VAMPIRE VS ELF! WEREWOLF VS REINDEER! FRANKENSTEIN VS SNOWMAN! When Count Dracula, Igor, Mr. Hyde, and their forces of darkness invade the North Pole to obtain Ol’ Saint Nick’s ability to gain entrance into any home, Santa, Mrs. Claus, Jack Frost and all the forces of Christmas are forced to defend their home and their holiday! This is it, naughty vs. nice in an all-out, epic battle of the ageless for the ages! SANTA VS DRACULA! This time… It’s Seasonal!
Funded with a Kickstarter, this 168 page full-color graphic novel is being distributed by SLG Publishing and will be out in October. You can see the interior art here.

Start Publishing’s Halloween horror short-short story contest

Want to write a really, really short horror story? Start Publishing is having a short story contest. Writers must submit a 250 word short horror story to contest [at] start-media [dot] com. Upon email submission, they ask that writers tweet @startpublishing confirming the submission. Start Publishing will randomly select five stories to be judged by friend of The Update Michael J. Martinez (author of Daedalus Incident) to choose one winner. Martinez is going to critique the winner’s horror story and give special writing tips.

The winner’s horror story will be featured on the Start Publishing blog and the November issue newsletter. Winner will also be able to select one free eBook from the Start Publishing/Night Shade Books catalog. The winner will be announced on Start Publishing’s Twitter and Facebook pages on October 31st. Deadline for all submissions: October 21, 2013.

Is 250 words long enough to fit in some alternate history? Anyone up to the challenge?

Let's Play - Amnesia: A Machine For Pigs

Even more horror?!?! This is just a video I enjoyed last week and as a Victorian, horror-survival game, steampunk fans might enjoy it:
Who said it was hard to combine horror with alternate history? Right that was me...

Calendar

September 20-28: Steampunk version of The Pirates of Penzance in Tasmania, Australia. (I realize that is a big place, but I am too lazy to track down the exact town.)

September 26: Essex Museum (Salem, MA) will host a steampunk party.

October 1: Loncon 3 attending membership rates will increase.

October 10 and 12: Matthew Buchholz will be promoting his new book Alternate Histories of the World at two separate events in Pittsburgh, PA.

The monsters on the cover keep the theme going. Huh? HUH?

Links to the Multiverse

Articles


Apollo Quartet 3 Cover Reveal by Ian Sales at Whippleshield Books.
Black People Don’t Like Steampunk, Fantasy and Science Fiction! by Balogun at Chronicles of Harriet.
Buy Steamboat Rampage, Help Fight Cancer by Heather Massey at The Galaxy Express.
Gentler than Steampunk: Clockpunk Author Releases New Book by 1888PressRelease.
How to Change the World by Paul Kincaid at Through the dark labyrinth.
Playing Fast and Loose with History by David Barnett at Tor/Forge's Blog.
Time tourism by Charlie Stross at Charlie's Diary.
Total War Rome: Destroy Carthage by David Gibbins at Geek Syndicate.

Comics

Comic Book Preview: THE STEAMWORLD CHRONICLES at Nuke the Fridge.

Counterfactual and Real History

5 Embarrassing Failures History Class Turned Into Victories by John Champion at Cracked.
The 5 Most Terrifying Civilizations In The History of the World by Neal Nicholson at Cracked.
Alternate Histories & Their Impact On 2013-14 by Zdeno's Cigar at SB Nation.
Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers & The Cold War by Andrew Liptak at Kirkus.
What Might Have Been, and the Fall of Lehman by Andrew Ross Sorkin at DealB%K.

Games

‘Dishonored: Game Of The Year Edition’ Announced by Samuel James Riley at Game Rant.
Sengoku Basara 4 Will Have An Alternate “What If” History Mode by Eugene at Siliconera.
The Swindle, an indie steampunk stealth game, put on indefinite hold by Tim Colwill at Games.on.net.

Reviews

The Age of Godpunk by James Lovegrove at Falcata Times.
Alternate Histories of the World by Matthew Buchholz at Hyperallergic.
The Bone Season by Samantha Shannon at The Sydney Morning Herald.
A Case of Doubtful Death by Linda Stratmann at Alt Hist.
Inceptio by Alison Morton at Alt Hist.
Wild Cards (Series) by George R.R. Martin at Em and Emm Expound on Exposition.
William Shakespeare’s Star Wars by Ian Doescher at Functional Nerds.

Television

10 Biggest Dodged Bullets in the History of Doctor Who by Charlie Janes Anders at io9.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

New Releases 9/17/13

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Hardcovers

Anno Dracula: Johnny Alucard by Kim Newman

Description from Amazon.

DRACULA COMES TO NEW YORK: Kim Newman returns to one of the great bestselling vampire tales of the modern era. Considered alongside I Am Legend and Interview with theVampire as one of the stand-out vampire stories of the last century - this brand-new novel is the first in over a decade from the remarkable and influential Anno Dracula series.

Newman’s dark and impish tale begins with a single question: What if Dracula had survived his encounters with Bram Stoker’s Dr. John Seward and enslaved Victorian England?

Fallen from grace and driven from the British Empire in previous instalments, Dracula seems long gone. A relic of the past. Yet, when vampire boy Johnny Alucard descends upon America, stalking the streets of New York and Hollywood, haunting the lives of the rich and famous, from Sid and Nancy to Andy Warhol, Orson Welles, and Francis Ford Coppola, sinking his fangs ever deeper into the zeitgeist of 1980s America, it seems the past might not be dead after all.

Delia's Shadow by Jamie Lee Moyer

Description from Amazon.

It is the dawn of a new century in San Francisco and Delia Martin is a wealthy young woman whose life appears ideal. But a dark secret colors her life, for Delia’s most loyal companions are ghosts, as she has been gifted (or some would say cursed) with an ability to peer across to the other side.

Since the great quake rocked her city in 1906, Delia has been haunted by an avalanche of the dead clamoring for her help. Delia flees to the other side of the continent, hoping to gain some peace. After several years in New York, Delia believes she is free…until one determined specter appears and she realizes that she must return to the City by the Bay in order to put this tortured soul to rest.

It will not be easy, as the ghost is only one of the many victims of a serial killer who was never caught. A killer who after thirty years is killing again.

And who is now aware of Delia’s existence.

Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl by David Barnett

Description from Amazon.

Nineteenth century London is the center of a vast British Empire. Airships ply the skies and Queen Victoria presides over three-quarters of the known world—including the East Coast of America, following the failed revolution of 1775.

London might as well be a world away from Sandsend, a tiny village on the Yorkshire coast. Gideon Smith dreams of the adventure promised him by the lurid tales of Captain Lucian Trigger, the Hero of the Empire, told in Gideon’s favorite “penny dreadful.” When Gideon’s father is lost at sea in highly mysterious circumstances Gideon is convinced that supernatural forces are at work.  Deciding only Captain Lucian Trigger himself can aid him, Gideon sets off for London. On the way he rescues the mysterious mechanical girl Maria from a tumbledown house of shadows and iniquities. Together they make for London, where Gideon finally meets Captain Trigger.

But Trigger is little more than an aging fraud, providing cover for the covert activities of his lover, Dr. John Reed, a privateer and sometime agent of the British Crown. Looking for heroes but finding only frauds and crooks, it falls to Gideon to step up to the plate and attempt to save the day...but can a humble fisherman really become the true Hero of the Empire?

David Barnett's Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl is a fantastical steampunk fable set against an alternate historical backdrop: the ultimate Victoriana/steampunk mash-up!

Paperbacks

Age of Godpunk by James Lovegrove

Description from Amazon.

James Lovegrove presents three novellas with three different 'gods' and their appreance in the worlds of man. Age of Anansi, Age of Satan, and a third novella, Age of Gaia, appearing both in print and ebook for the first time with the release of this exciting omnibus.

Clockwork Heart by Dru Pagliassotti

Description from Amazon.

Taya soars over Ondinium on metal wings. She is an icarus — a courier privileged to travel freely across the city’s sectors and mingle indiscriminately among its castes. But even she can’t outfly the web of terrorism, loyalty, murder, and intrigue that snares her after a daring mid-air rescue. Taya finds herself entangled with the Forlore brothers, scions of an upperclass family: handsome, brilliant Alister, who sits on the governing council and writes programs for the Great Engine; and awkward, sharp-tongued Cristof, who has exiled himself from his caste and repairs clocks in Ondinium’s lowest sector. Both hide dangerous secrets, in this city that beats to the ticking of a clockwork heart…

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is you story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

"A Perfect Hell on Earth" Out in Paperback

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Hope you guys don't mind a little shameless self-promotion.

Over a year one of my first writing credits was published: "A Perfect Hell on Earth". Follow the diary entries of a Child Development Trooper on his first assignment in France. He is soldier in a very different Great War that has raged for so long that the remaining combatants have become warped versions of themselves.

I found Jake's Monthly, a project by editor Jake Johnson to publish a different anthology every month for a year. Impressed by such a feat (especially since Jake was still in high school) I decided to send my short story for the alternate history anthology. Luckily enough for me, Jake liked it and the rest is history. If you would still like an e-book copy of the Jake's Monthly- Alternate History Anthology (featuring "A Perfect Hell on Earth") you can get it at Smashwords for any price you want (even FREE).

I am here now, however, to inform you that there is a paperback version of my short story. Jake has collected 50 stories from his epic year of publishing into Jake's Monthly: Recollection. So if you are interested in getting a hard copy of "A Perfect Hell on Earth" and many other great stories, go to Createspace and pick up a copy.

I congratulate Jake once again on accomplishing his goal to produce his excellent anthology series and hope that we will see him again in the publishing industry in the near future. Let him be a reminder to all of us that if you want to see something made, sometimes the best person to do it is you.

In non-alternate history news, I had another story published recently. It is a time-travel short story called "Road Trip" and it is appearing in the Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. Learn more about it over at my writing blog.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

ABC's The Thirteen Set in a World Where the British Won the America Revolution

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This has been a banner year for alternate history television projects. There are plans to adapt The Man in the High CastleJonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, 11/22/63 and How Few Remain for the small screen. Those examples, however, are all based on books. No one, as far as I know, is working on an original idea.

Until now.

ABC will be running an alternate history show, called The Thirteen, where the American colonies lost the American Revolution. It will be a contemporary drama with Americans still fighting the British for freedom. Lionsgate TV and Allison Shearmur are the producers with Jim Agnew and Sean Keller are writing it (and they also wrote an upcoming Nicolas Cage film...groan).

So I have some issues with this premise. To start, the idea that Americans are still fighting for their independence seems implausible. Its not like the Scots still paint themselves blue, scream FREEDOM and attack any limey they see. No, they instead hold a referendum for independence. So after centuries of British rule following a failed rebellion, why are the Americans still fighting? How bad can the British be in this world? I fear we are going to be seeing British characters who have more in common with the villains from The Patriot than the OTL British who abolished slavery in 1833 (while it took Americans three and a half decades more and bloody civil war to end the practice).

And what about the rest of the world? Sean O'Neal of the AV Club asked, among other things, whether the rest of the British empire is still around. That made me wonder: why are the British trying to hold onto their American colonies well into the 21st century when they were willing to give increasing self-governance and eventual independence to their dominions, like Canada and Australia, in OTL? Are we going to see a British-wank with the Union flag covering the world?

Personally I am not that impressed by what I have learned so far about The Thirteen. With cable having such a renaissance lately, I would rather see a show like this on a smaller network that does not have the budget for anything flashy. Still not everyone is as pessimistic as me. Counterfactual historian Gavriel Rosenfeld feels the show could be a success if it is used as vehicle for some social commentary, much like The Two Georges was, but how likely will we see Sir Martin Luther King? I'm not sure I agree that a network like ABC will go that route, but one can hope.

That is pretty much all we know about the show. A ballsy concept, a lot of room to screw up, plenty of speculation and this blogger trying not to get to over excited.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

The Louisiana Purchase Revisited Part 1: What If Napoleon Bonaparte Sent the Leclerc Expedition to Louisiana?

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Guest post by Thomas Christian Williams.

Spain’s secret retrocession of Louisiana Territory to France in 1800 gave Napoleon Bonaparte a unique opportunity—to challenge the United States for control of North America.  For three long years the ambitious Premier Consul held the destiny of the New World—perhaps the entire world—in his all-encompassing hands.  Then, faced by the return of war with England and unable to send troops to occupy the territory military, Bonaparte spun around faster than an alligator and sold Louisiana to Thomas Jefferson.

Didn’t Bonaparte see the long-range consequences of his hasty decision?  Could the territory, reinforced with French troops, have withstood a British blockade and American invasion?  What would the world look like today if Bonaparte had gone to New Orleans himself to establish a New French Republic in the very heart of North America?

After many false starts Bonaparte gave the job of occupying Louisiana to General Claude Victor in June 1802.  Victor’s expedition, comprised of some 3000 troops, assembled in the port of Helvoet Sluys near Rotterdam that fall and winter.  But logistical and weather concerns delayed Victor’s departure until the following spring.  And by then it was too late.  Bonaparte had made his decision.  Louisiana was sold and the Victor expedition never set sail.

From an alternate history viewpoint, Bonaparte’s best opportunity to occupy Louisiana came about a year and a half earlier during the fall of 1801.  The Peace of Amiens ending the war with England had just been signed, eliminating the threat posed by the Royal Navy.  The way was open for Bonaparte to rebuild France’s New World Empire, composed largely Saint Domingue (Haiti) and Guadeloupe, two once-lucrative sugar islands, and now Louisiana.

Which to occupy first?  Both Saint Domingue and Guadeloupe were under the control of former slaves and there was a powerful Creole lobby in Paris (including Bonaparte’s wife Josephine) clamoring for the return of their “property.”  As for Louisiana, Bonaparte had yet to receive legal title to the territory due to an irritating clause in the retrocession treaty that required him to obtain an Italian province for the Duke of Parma, Louisiana’s disposed regent.

As is often the case, greed trumped vision.  Setting aside the Louisiana option for the moment, Bonaparte sent an expedition comprised of some 20,000 troops to Saint Domingue in an ultimately futile attempt to return the blacks to slavery.  This expedition, headed by General Charles Leclerc, Bonaparte’s brother-in-law, represented the Premier Consul’s best opportunity to occupy Louisiana with a powerful force of crack troops.  This possibility, however remote, was a cause of concern in both London and Washington, D.C.

True enough, such a sneaky action would have enraged the Court of Madrid—but so what?  Respect for diplomatic niceties was never Bonaparte’s strong suit.  And besides, what could Spain have really done about it if a powerful French army had occupied New Orleans just a tad before the legal transfer of Louisiana had been finalized?

An intriguing question arises at this point: What if Bonaparte had somehow known the Leclerc expedition to Saint Domingue was destined to fail?  Might he have decided to send Leclerc directly to New Orleans instead?

Enter a once famous French philosopher and politician, Constantin-Francois Volney, author of the controversial book Ruins of Empires, a post-Enlightenment review of human history anonymously translated into English by Thomas Jefferson.

Asked for his opinion before Leclerc set sail, Volney advised Bonaparte that the Saint Domingue expedition was destined to fail for three reasons: the blacks would launch a guerilla war against the French occupation army, yellow fever would decimate Bonaparte’s white-skinned troops and the British crown could, at the drop of a tricorn hat, impose a blockade upon the island due to the Royal Navy’s command of the high seas.  For good measure Volney added that French colonists had always failed in all their North American endeavors because “they spend all their time gossiping with each other or chasing Indian girls” while the Anglo-Saxons work in the fields.

Enraged by this insolent analysis, Bonaparte dismissed Volney as a “philosophical dreamer” and ordered the expedition to proceed anyway, a decision which led to Leclerc’s death and the near-total destruction of his army due to guerilla war and yellow fever, just as Volney predicted.  On the flip side, if Leclerc had gone directly to Louisiana instead, a war with the Americans would almost certainly have followed.  Even so, Leclerc’s 20,000 troops would have had time to prepare defensive positions both above and below New Orleans, a formidable barrier as the British later discovered at the Battle of New Orleans in 1815.

So what prevented Bonaparte from seeing the opportunity of sending Leclerc directly to New Orleans?  The simple truth is Napoleon Bonaparte was never a true “republican” who believed in representative government, free trade and freedom for oppressed peoples including the slaves.  From the very beginning Bonaparte planned to reestablish the Old Regime—including its mercantile-based colonial empire—only with his own Corsica-born clan seated at the top of the pyramid.

Hence, for alternate historians, what seems like the most obvious choice for Bonaparte to make—to send Leclerc to Louisiana rather than Saint Domingue—is in fact quite impossible due to Bonaparte’s insatiable personal ambitions.  Bonaparte was Bonaparte after all—don’t ask a scorpion to stop acting like a scorpion.

In short, blinded by his own greed, Bonaparte never considered doing what many French alive today wished he had done: sailed to New Orleans to found a New French Republic, thus preventing the construction of today’s world-dominating American Empire.

(End of Part 1.  In Part 2, Volney establishes a New French Republic in Louisiana, thus provoking Bonaparte to sail to New Orleans to overthrow Volney’s rebel government.)

* * *

Thomas Christian Williams works in the political section of the U.S. Embassy in Paris, France.  His first novel, English Turn: Napoleon Invades Louisiana, is available on Amazon.  He is currently working on a second novel: Kash Kachu (White House): In the desert southwest about a thousand years ago, two half-brothers fight for control of an ancient holy city racked by drought, famine and disbelief.  Join him on Twitter @RuinsofEmpires.

Weekly Update #122

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Editor's Note

So if you haven't been following your favorite editor on Facebook, you probably didn't hear about the reason for the lack of content lately. Well here it is again:
Its a little blurry, but that is the first pic of my kid, due this May. So sorry guys, but my wife and my unborn child are going to be taking up more of my time. I am planning on introducing a new recurring segment this Wednesday so hopefully I can promise you at least three posts a week.

Thank you for your patience.

And now the news...

Star Wars: Verily, A New Hope is now on sale from Random House Audio

The fictional mashup that brought the bard and Lucas' Star Wars together is now an audiobook from Random House. Now you can relive the saga of Star Wars in iambic pentameter.

The book will be narrated by Daniel Davis, Jonathan Davis, January LaVoy, Marc Thompson, and author Ian Doescher. Here is the description from the press release:
[T]his saga of a wise (Jedi) knight, an evil (Sith) lord, a beautiful princess held captive and a young coming-of-age hero, abounds with all the valor and villainy of Shakespeare’s greatest plays. 
Full of feuding royalty, family melodrama, comical fools, and fantastic creatures, Star Wars has always been the most Shakespearean of Hollywood blockbusters. Now it’s presented in a manner that Shakespeare himself would recognize–with classic iambic pentameter and Elizabethan-style stage directions. 
Return once more to a galaxy far, far away with this sublime retelling of George Lucas’s epic Star Wars in the style of the immortal Bard of Avon. The saga of a wise (Jedi) knight and an evil (Sith) lord, of a beautiful princess held captive and a young hero coming of age, Star Wars abounds with all the valor and villainy of Shakespeare’s greatest plays. ’Tis a tale told by fretful droids, full of faithful Wookiees and fearsome Stormtroopers, signifying…pretty much everything. Reimagined in glorious iambic pentameter, William Shakespeare’s Star Wars will astound and edify Rebels and Imperials alike. Zounds! This is the audiobook you’re looking for.
So if you are one of those nerds who actually like reading Shakespeare in high school, this may be a great book for you.

War of the Vikings Now Playable in Alpha via Steam Early Access
Fans of Paradox games will be pleased to know that they have opened War of the Vikings on Steam’s Early Access program. War of the Vikings, the upcoming multiplayer close-combat game from Fatshark, can be purchased and played immediately thanks to the Steam Early Access program, allowing players to follow the growth of the game firsthand as it makes its way through the development process. Early Access players will be able to shape the future of War of the Vikings from the inside, and will receive the finished product at no extra cost when complete.

“After the first well-received War of the Vikings Alpha we began planning for the next phase and explored all options available to us,” said Gordon Van Dyke, Executive Producer of the War franchise. “We already knew we wanted to do another public Alpha and Beta, and we’d planned to offer pre-orders. After consideration, it was a no-brainer to go with Steam Early Access and kill two birds with one axe, and give our community ample opportunity to help shape the final product.”

Multiple packages are available for purchase during Early Access, including a Standard Edition, or the Blood Eagle Edition that will include a digital concept art book and soundtrack alongside exclusive gear. The incredible Valhalla Edition, War of the Vikings’ most premium package, will come with all in-game content unlocked, and will also grant access to all future content at no extra charge – along with the digital concept art book and an extended Deluxe Edition soundtrack. Every edition also grants players membership in the Early Access Club, which includes bonus loot and an additional shield pattern when the game is released.

If you play the alpha, let The Update know how it went. We need more content on games.

Calendar

Oct 13: Last day to see the steampunk play "Navigator" in Atlanta, GA and the last day to enter the Alternate Histories Of The World by Matthew Bucholz giveaway.

Oct 16: Last day to fund the Li'l Eddie: Edgar Allan Poe for Kids Kickstarter.

Oct 31: Last day to submit your alternate history story to Fictionvale.

Nov 7: Last day to submit your story to theIrregularityanthology.

And, as usual, I am too lazy to list all of the upcoming steampunk events listed at Tor.com so just go to their site and check it out.

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

10 Silliest Rules of Time Travel from Science Fiction by Charlie Jane Anders at io9.
Musings on Alternate History by unicornblues at Way too Fantasy.
Why I'm tired of seeing Nikola Tesla in science fiction by Lauren Davis at io9.

Books

Cover reveal: a world turned upside down in Guy Adams' 'Once Upon a Time in Hell' at The Solaris Editor's Blog.
The Genre of ‘Alternate History’ and Its Fictional Application by BJ Avilla.
Historical Research for Alternate History is....Challenging by j_cheney at In the Void.
How Human History Could Have Turned Out (And Probably Should Have) by Matthew Buchholz at Gizmodo.
OLD MARS ed .by George R.R. Martin, 50 Page Friday at Scribd.
Sobel Wiki: a state of forgetfulness by Johnny Pez.
Sudden Industries Releases New eBook Series Targeted at Reluctant Boy Readers at Consumer Electronics Net.
Using Archive.org to Research Your Novel by Mark Lord.
Why Writing Alternate History is Both Awesome and Soul Crushing by Elizabeth May at Corsets, Cutlasses & Candlesticks.

Comics

Gail Carriger’s Soulless The Manga: Volume 1 by Patrick Hester at SF Signal.

Counterfactual and Real History

If It Happened There ... the Government Shutdown by Joshua Keating at Slate.
John Judis's Counterfactual Reflections on World War II and the Federal Government Shutdown by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
On October 1st 2013, Nigeria celebrates its 53rd year of Independence. Tolu Ogunlesi imagines the circumstances if this year were to mark the first at Wings.
Richard Dawkins on Hitler and the Tenuousness of Human Existence by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
The Romneycare Counterfactual by Reihan Salam at National Review Online.
Swiss war game envisages invasion by bankrupt French by Henry Samuel at The Telegraph.
The Technological History of Science Fiction by Andrew Liptak at Kirkus.
Watch the Second World War unfold over Europe in 7 minutes by George Dvorsky at io9.
Why Doesn’t Science Fiction Care About the Threat of Nuclear Apocalypse Anymore? by Felicity Savage at Amazing Stories.

Films

Dimensions Release Date by Larry Amyett, Jr at Dieselpunk.

Games

Cedaria: Blackout is a Middle Eastern Steampunk RPG by Evvy Kube at Gaming Illustrated.
Youth Digital Students Win National STEM Challenge With Steampunk Platformer ‘Etiquette Anarchy’ at Gamasutra.

Podcasts

Dissecting Worlds Series 7, Episode 7: Conclusions at Geek Syndicate.
WtF a Broadcast Episode #13: Alternate History at Way too Fantasy.

Reviews

Elementary: 2.2: Solve For X at Thinking about books.
Johnny Alucard by Kim Newman at The Guardian.
Revolution 2.2: Reanimation at Paul Levinson's Infinite Regress.
Sherlock Holmes: The Stuff of Nightmares by James Lovegrove at Fantasy Matters.
Steampunk Holmes by P.C. Martin at Geek Dad.
Steampunk Originals, Vol. 1 at Geeks of Doom.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter

New Releases 10/8/13

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Hardcovers

Old Mars edited by George R.R. Martin and Gardner Dozois

Description from Amazon.

Fifteen all-new stories by science fiction’s top talents, collected by bestselling author George R. R. Martin and multiple-award winning editor Gardner Dozois

Burroughs’s A Princess of Mars. Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles. Heinlein’s Red Planet. These and so many more inspired generations of readers with a sense that science fiction’s greatest wonders did not necessarily lie far in the future or light-years across the galaxy but were to be found right now on a nearby world tantalizingly similar to our own—a red planet that burned like an ember in our night sky . . . and in our imaginations.

This new anthology of fifteen all-original science fiction stories, edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois, celebrates the Golden Age of Science Fiction, an era filled with tales of interplanetary colonization and derring-do. Before the advent of powerful telescopes and space probes, our solar system could be imagined as teeming with strange life-forms and ancient civilizations—by no means always friendly to the dominant species of Earth. And of all the planets orbiting that G-class star we call the Sun, none was so steeped in an aura of romantic decadence, thrilling mystery, and gung-ho adventure as Mars.

Join such seminal contributors as Michael Moorcock, Mike Resnick, Joe R. Lansdale, S. M. Stirling, Mary Rosenblum, Ian McDonald, Liz Williams, James S. A. Corey, and others in this brilliant retro anthology that turns its back on the cold, all-but-airless Mars of the Mariner probes and instead embraces an older, more welcoming, more exotic Mars: a planet of ancient canals cutting through red deserts studded with the ruined cities of dying races.

Paperbacks

Abe Lincoln: Public Enemy No. 1 by Bill Walker and Brian Anthony

Description from Amazon.

When John Wilkes Booth shoots Lincoln with a bullet cursed by the notorious Chicken Man, a local voodoo practitioner, he unwittingly sets in motion a chain of events extending far into the future. Instead of killing Lincoln, the bullet puts the president into a coma for sixty-eight years, his body remaining limber and ageless. When he awakens in 1933, Abe Lincoln is a man out of time, a revered icon...and a political pariah. FDR and J. Edgar Hoover not only do not want him around, they want him to retire. But their plan to be rid of him backfires and Lincoln is on the run, a fugitive from justice. Determined to reach Chicago and retrieve the small fortune left in trust for him by his long-dead son, Lincoln discovers that Hoover has confiscated all his money, leaving him destitute. With Bureau of Investigation agent Melvin Purvis in hot pursuit, Lincoln finds his way to a hobo camp where he befriends a young runaway, who agrees to accompany the former president back to Washington. There Lincoln hopes that Hannah Wheelhouse, the Chicken Man's granddaughter, can help him find the peace he longs for. Then fate deals Lincoln another strange hand when he and the boy end up as hostages to infamous bank robber John Dillinger. Instead of leaving them by the side of the road after the robbery, Dillinger takes a liking to Lincoln and invites him to join the gang, promising him he'll get all his money back. Will Lincoln survive long enough to recapture his fortune and get away, or will he be hunted down in a manner unbefitting a martyred President? In Brian Anthony and Bill Walker's inventive and entertaining novel, history gets a work-out, the action is flat-out, and almost everyone gets rubbed-out!

Spirit of the Century Presents: King Khan by Harry Connolly

Description from Amazon.

THIS TOWN'S GOING APE! Professor Khan, learned ape, has traveled through time, fought psychic dinosaurs and shark-men, visited Atlantis, and battled across the sands of Mars. He's seen it all- - until an arrow shooting out of the sky sends him to the strangest place yet... Hollywood!

Tales of the Wold Newton Universe by Philip Jose Farmer

Description from Amazon.

A collection of Wold Newton-inspired short stories by Farmerphiles, experts, and the Grand Master of SF himself.A real meteorite fell near Wold Newton, Yorkshire, England, on December 13, 1795, and was found to be radioactive, causing genetic mutations in the occupants of a passing coach. Many of their descendants were thus endowed with extremely high intelligence and strength, as well as an exceptional capacity and drive to perform good, or, as the case may be, evil deeds.

To fans, authors and publishers...

Is your story going to be published in time for the next New Releases? Contact us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.
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