"A good anthology"
The Daimon by Harry Turtledove. Though his admirers
inform Sokrates that he has done his public duty and need
not accompany the Army in the Sicily campaign, he insists
on joining General Alkibiades. War with Sparta is
inevitable and with Sokrates to guide him, General
Alkibiades might be able to lead Athens to the victory. Shikari in Galveston by S.M. Stirling. Several
years have passed since the comet changed the earth. Now
Peshawar Lance Eric King is hunting in barbaric Texas where
one mistake could lead to him being on the menu. The Logistics of Carthage by Mary Gentle. A few
years have passed since the Turks conquered Constantinople,
but now they target the Gothic capital Carthage. Though
the present looks bleak, Yolande sees her city-state
surviving into the twentieth century and beyond, but how to
endure the ashes of the fifteenth century is the question? The Last Ride of German Freddie by Walter Jon
Williams. On the eve of the street brawl between the Earps
and the Cowboys, Frederich Nietzsche arrives in Tombstone.
He quickly debates philosophical issues with the
participants of the upcoming gunfight. All four of these short novellas are well written hooking
readers as each tale feels genuine due to the real figures
fitting smoothly in their substitute environs. The award
winning authors provide alternate historical readers with
quite a quartet in WORLDS THAT WEREN'T to include
continuity from previous books (at least on the parts of
Stirling and Gentle). This is a strong anthology that
takes readers on a brilliant 'what if' trek. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted July 15, 2002
SummaryThis is a landmark anthology of four original novellas by
the reigning masters of alternate history. Set in different
eras, different places, and different times, these forays
into "what might have been" showcases the stunning breadth
and far-reaching possibilities the genre represents.
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