Showing posts with label Chris Nuttall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Nuttall. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

New Releases 9/6/16

You can support The Update by clicking the banner to your right or the links below if you are purchasing through Amazon!

Hardcovers

Everfair: A Novel by Nisi Shawl

Everfair is a wonderful Neo-Victorian alternate history novel that explores the question of what might have come of Belgium's disastrous colonization of the Congo if the native populations had learned about steam technology a bit earlier. Fabian Socialists from Great Britian join forces with African-American missionaries to purchase land from the Belgian Congo's "owner," King Leopold II. This land, named Everfair, is set aside as a safe haven, an imaginary Utopia for native populations of the Congo as well as escaped slaves returning from America and other places where African natives were being mistreated.

Nisi Shawl's speculative masterpiece manages to turn one of the worst human rights disasters on record into a marvelous and exciting exploration of the possibilities inherent in a turn of history. Everfair is told from a multiplicity of voices: Africans, Europeans, East Asians, and African Americans in complex relationships with one another, in a compelling range of voices that have historically been silenced. Everfair is not only a beautiful book but an educational and inspiring one that will give the reader new insight into an often ignored period of history.

MJ-12: Inception by Michael J. Martinez

It is a new world, stunned by the horrors that linger in the aftermath of total war. The United States and Soviet Union are squaring off in a different kind of conflict, one that’s fought in the shadows, where there are whispers of strange and mysterious developments. . .

Normal people across the United States have inexplicably gained paranormal abilities. A factory worker can heal the sick and injured. A schoolteacher bends emotions to her will. A car salesman alters matter with a simple touch. A former soldier speaks to the dying and gains their memories as they pass on.

They are the Variants, controlled by a secret government program called MAJESTIC-12 to open a new front in the Cold War.

From the deserts of Nevada to the palaces of Istanbul, the halls of power in Washington to the dark, oppressive streets of Prague, the Variants are thrown into a deadly game of shifting alliances. Amidst the seedy underbelly of nations, these once-ordinary Americans dropped in extraordinary circumstances will struggle to come to terms with their abilities as they fight to carve out a place for themselves in a world that may ultimately turn against them.

And as the MAJESTIC-12 program will soon discover, there are others out there like them, some with far more malevolent goals.

Prince of Outcasts by SM Stirling

John Arminger Mackenzie wanted to be a troubadour, but fate made him the son of the king of Montival. His sister Princess Órlaith will deservedly inherit the throne of the High Kings, and it will only pass unto him in the event of her death, leaving the young Prince on an unknown path to discover his true role in the family.

The opportunity to prove his mettle comes when John’s ship, the Tarshish Queen, is caught in the fierce storm raised against the enemies of the alliance. When the clouds recede and the skies clear, John and his crew find themselves on the other side of the Pacific, in the island chains of the Ceram Sea, fighting to survive against vicious pirates and monstrous creatures of the deep, meeting new allies and mysterious enemies of this world and another.

Now, Prince John must seize his birthright and lead his people in battle against the darkest forces man and nature can conjure against them.

Paperbacks

101 Stumbles in the March of History: What If the Great Mistakes in War, Government, Industry, and Economics Were Not Made? by Bill Fawcett

An all-new compendium of 101 historic screw-ups from the author of 100 Mistakes that Changed History.

DID I DO THAT???

When asked to name a successor, Alexander the Great declared that his empire should go “to the strongest”. . . but would rival factions have descended into war if he’d been a little more specific?

What if the Vienna Academy of Art took a chance on a hopeful young student named Adolf Hitler?

If Pope Clement VII granted King Henry VIII an annulment, England would likely still be Catholic today—and so would America.

Bill Fawcett, author of 100 Mistakes That Changed History, offers a compendium of 101 all-new mammoth mistakes—from the ill-fated rule of Emperor Darius III to the equally ill-fated search for WMDs in Iraq—that will, unfortunately, never be forgotten by history.

E-Books

Our Heroes Through Tomorrow by Dan Gainor

Six scintillating stories from a modern master of speculative fiction!

Unintended Consequences: In a future where nuclear weapons no longer function, conventional warfare rears its ugly head as America becomes the target of a hostile invasion, and a young computer wiz finds himself in the thick of the fight.

We The People: A billionaire rancher seeks to rekindle the spirit of America... by cloning the Founding Fathers!

Soul Tracker: A science-fiction epic of alien worlds, conjoined souls, and one man's quest to become the ultimate warrior.

Original Sin: College students set out on a quest to prove that time travel is possible, only to find themselves stranded in an all too familiar past, with a crucial decision to make about altering fate.

Just Desserts: Aliens seek to neutralize the "human threat" through a virus that makes "zombies" all too real... only, what will be the true consequence of this bio-warfare?

Drawing A Line: In a future where humanity is conquered and fragmented amidst the stars, the last soldiers must hold the line between warrior and pirate as they struggle to fight for freedom and survival.

Ragnarok by Chris Nuttall

The Nazi Civil War rages on ...

The Provisional Government has scored a significant victory, driving the Waffen-SS back from Berlin and winning itself time to plot a counteroffensive. But Karl Holliston - the self-declared Fuhrer of the Greater German Reich - isn't about to give up so easily. As mighty armies prepare for the final campaign, winter sweeps down from the east and both side prepare their ultimate weapons, the fate of the world hangs in the balance ...

... And if the Reich burns, the rest of the world may burn too.

To readers, 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.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Friday, July 1, 2016

Top 5 Posts from June 2016

Most viewed map from June 2016.
So June was fourth highest month in terms of page views. Not bad. Lets take a look at the articles that got us to that point:

1) The Limits of Nazi Germany by Chris Nuttall.





Fun fact: all these posts happened within the first 8 days of June.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

The Limits of Nazi Germany

Guest post by Chris Nuttall.

One thing that bedevilled me, as I worked on the outline for what would become Twilight of the Gods, was the question of just how far the Reich could realistically go without becoming a Nazi-Wank.  This is not actually an easy question to answer.  Very few people in 1939 would have believed that the French could be crushed so easily in 1940 - indeed, the Germans came alarmingly close to running out of ammunition during the Polish Campaign - and very few commentators in 1941 gave the Soviets more than six months before they too were crushed.

Post-war writers have added their own spin on matters.  Books such as The Man in the High Castle and In The Presence of Mine Enemies assumed that an alternate Reich would invade and occupy America in the process of an inevitable rise to global supremacy.  Others - including myself - predicted a resumption of the war between Germany and Britain (and America).  But just how realistic are such scenarios?

The important point to bear in mind is that Hitler lived during what I believe to be the last great period of conquest.  Hitler’s armies were armed and trained to race forward, seeking out the weak points in enemy defences and smashing through opposing armies before their enemies could react to the threat.  Advances on such a scale were simply not possible during the Great War.  At the same time, the threat of nuclear annihilation simply did not exist.  The RAF could - and did - bomb Germany, but - even if chemical weapons had been deployed - their ability to bring Germany to its knees was practically non-existent.  Defence planners believed that the bomber would always get through, yet ... so what?

By the time the 1960s rolled around, the armies were far more powerful - but, at the same time, more constrained.  A Russian drive westward would almost certainly have triggered a nuclear response, when - if - NATO was unable to handle it.  Russia would have been devastated, along with Western Europe.  It is one of the many ironies of the Cold War that the US, which had a considerable nuclear supremacy, spent most of the war believing that it was fighting to catch up.

One may assume, of course, that Hitler was mad enough to consider launching a full-scale nuclear war.  It would certainly fit into a story!  But, at the same time, Hitler was rather more rational than we prefer to believe.  Certainly, most of his pre-1944 decisions were rational based on what he knew at the time.  Marching to Stalingrad was disastrous - we are told in hindsight - but it wouldn't have looked like a certain failure in 1943.

The other two major limitations on the Third Reich lie in their army and air force.  Hitler had a fairly modern battle fleet - but it was grossly outnumbered by the British.  (Adding the Italian Navy to the Reich doesn’t really tip the balance.)  Hitler could - and did - threaten supply lines between Britain and her empire (and America) but he couldn't strike directly at Britain itself.  Meanwhile, the Luftwaffe was largely a short-range striking force.  The Germans never had a successful long-range heavy bomber, ensuring that large parts of Britain were immune to German attack (and America was completely out of range.)  Any attempt to assess the limits of the Third Reich must take those factors into account.

So ... how far could Hitler have gone?

To the west, Operation Sealion was pretty much a pipe dream.  Some authors have speculated that the invasion might have been possible, but the Germans really had too many limitations - a shortage of shipping, among others - to make Sealion anything other than a very risky gamble.  Hitler simply could not get across the English Channel.

For this to change, Hitler would need to reshape his air and naval forces radically, following a strategy that would have no viable purpose other than the invasion of Britain.  Even if the Hitler of 1938 was prepared to make the investment, long before France was crushed in 1940 and Sealion became necessary, such programs would very definitely change the political situation during the run up to the war.

[The idea that Hitler could have invaded America is so absurd not to require further discussion.]

Hitler presumably has no need to occupy either Spain or Portugal.  Neither power was inclined to challenge the Third Reich overtly.  However, he may well want to pressure the Spanish to take Gibraltar and the Portuguese to break ties with Britain.  Both steps could be taken, at considerable economic cost to both Spain or Portugal.  In such an eventuality, one might see Hitler facing his own version of the Peninsula War.

To the south, the problem facing Hitler is logistics.  The Germans might have been better than the British at desert warfare, but Rommel was always operating on a shoestring.  Hitler always saw the desert war as a sideshow, rather than a potential way to bring the British to heel.  And again, from his point of view, he was right.  Nazi gains in the Middle East would always be tenuous as long as the British remained undefeated and Soviet Russia loomed to the east.

Taking Malta during 1940 would have been easy - even the Italians could probably have done it.  (Indeed, a timeline where Germany invades Malta instead of Crete might lead to German dominance in the region.)  Malta would serve as a giant airbase, allowing the Germans to drive the Royal Navy out of the region and ship additional supplies to Rommel.  Thus reinforced, Rommel might have been able to push forward to Suez and drive into Palestine, creating a massive humanitarian crisis.  Scenting British weakness, the Arabs would rise in revolt, enthusiastically supporting the Germans.  As the British position crumbled, the Germans would probably be able to cow the Saudis (unless American forces arrived in time to dare Hitler to attack them.)  They’d certainly have access to a great deal of oil

Depending on precisely when this happened, Turkey and Iran would both become very important.  Turkey would have good reason to secure Northern Iraq before the Germans could arrive - a long-standing Turkish objective - while Iran would probably try to remain neutral or even join the Germans.  (Iran was occupied in August 1941, but if the Germans pushed forward hard Iran might rise in revolt.)  At that point, the Germans might see value in Iran as a buffer state.

Logistics would remain a major headache for the Germans.  Marching all the way into India would seem the ideal way to end the war, but their logistics would need to be built up heavily before they could make their move.

To the east, just how far could the Germans go?

Hitler did come very close to taking Moscow in 1941 (this has, obviously, been hotly debated.)  Taking Moscow would not just have dealt a crippling blow to Russian morale, it would also have cost the Russians a large part of their transport infrastructure and the bureaucratic system that kept the USSR running.  It’s tempting to joke that shooting the bureaucrats would make the USSR more efficient, but it’s wartime - they need that command economy.  Worse, perhaps, large reserves of manpower would be lost.  Stalin, assuming he survives the battle, would have to rely on troops drawn from more restive parts of the USSR, troops who might not be remotely trustworthy.  And if the Germans make even the slightest attempt to treat the natives well, even as a tactical measure, they are likely to win hundreds of thousands of adherents.

This was, I suspect, Germany’s last chance to win the war outright.  Taking Stalingrad in 1942/43 would have certainly hurt the Russians, but it wouldn't have been enough to keep the Americans from bombing Germany heavily and continuing to supply the Russians with Lend Lease, even if there was no second front.  By 1945, America would have atomic bombs - if only a handful.  Dropping those bombs on Germany would do immense damage, possibly prompting the military to overthrow Hitler and order a surrender.  At that point, the Reich would be doomed.

So ... let us assume a Reich that reaches from the French coastline to the Urals and the border of Iran.  How long can they actually keep it?

That is not, of course, an easy question to answer.  Taking territory is one thing, but controlling it indefinitely is quite another.  The Germans would be no less willing than the Soviet Union to exterminate vast numbers of people or forcibly relocate them to places well out of the way.  On the other hand, controlling places like Greece and France would be difficult.  Would the French go quiet if the Germans offered them a liveable peace?  Or would the French resistance grow stronger as the German grip tightened?

The Germans would, I suspect, face a great deal of partisan warfare in both Russia and the Middle East, if only because they won’t be offering the natives any sort of liveable peace.  Hitler might have been happy to work with the Arabs - the Arabs would probably exterminate the Jews in Palestine for him - but he didn’t see them as anything more than Untermenschen.  I would expect the Nazi grip to tighten, just to make sure the oil keeps flowing to Germany, and eventually a bid to outright exterminate the locals.

Hitler would need to boost his population by any means necessary.  On one hand, the Nazi plans to encourage a growing birth-rate would have time to bed in, probably giving Nazi Germany a baby-boom.  On the other, large numbers of young men will have been killed during the war, probably forcing the Germans to use young women in industries rather than bringing up children.  (The Nazis didn't want women to work outside the homes, but they may have to compromise if there is a major manpower shortage.)  The kidnapping program - in which the Nazis took ‘Aryan’ children from their parents and gave them to good Germans to raise - would probably pick up speed.  So too would attempts to convince ‘Aryan’ westerners - like Norwegians - that they were actually Germanic.

The German economy is an interesting question.  Historically, despite waging war against most of the world, the Nazis didn't embrace a command economy until 1942, when Speer was appointed as Minister of Armaments.  Speer consolidated power over the German economy despite bitter opposition.  I’ve actually heard it speculated that Speer’s reforms came six months too late to save Germany.  Assuming that Speer’s reforms are not seen as necessary in this timeline, what will happen to the German economy?  I suspect it might well remain a fragmented mess of bailiwicks, controlled by the various German ministries, rather than a single organised whole.

Nazi Germany was constantly pushing the limits of technology - rockets and jet aircraft in particular - but I doubt the US will remain behind for long.  The real question would be German mass production.  Using slave labour in factories which require precision and adherence to detail is asking for trouble.  Choosing to ignore ‘Jewish’ science would cripple the Reich’s nuclear program.  As technology advances, the Reich might well start falling behind.

Education, in fact, is likely to have a dangerous long-term effect on the Reich.  Children were not taught to think for themselves and question authority.  The SS wouldn't see any difference between questioning orthodox science and questioning the Reich itself.  Children were expected to join the Hitler Youth and excel in manly pursuits - creating a body of part-trained manpower for the military - rather than study science.  Matters would not be helped by the Reich’s triumph seemingly ‘proving’ Hitler’s nuttier racial theories.  Reasoning from incorrect - and absurd - premises would lead future scientists to incorrect conclusions.

Overall, just how long would the Reich actually last?

Hitler will die at some point, shortly after the war.  His health was already failing before he killed himself in OTL.  Unless he does something to create a long-term governing structure for the Reich, there is almost certainly going to be a major dispute over the succession, not least because Hitler liked playing his subordinates off against one another.  Himmler would seem to be the heir presumptive, but there would be other candidates.  Speer?  Goering?  Or someone who rose in power past the end of 1945?  It’s very tempting to imagine a civil war following the death of Hitler, as the SS attempts to take complete control and the other factions actively resist it.

The Reich would presumably have a handful of nuclear weapons by 1950, unless - for whatever reason - nukes are never used in this timeline.  I suspect at that point global politics would effectively freeze, just as they did in OTL.  The Reich would maintain its dominance over Europe, while America built a NATO-analogue or went back to sleep (assuming there was no Japanese War).  Britain would want to try to maintain its empire, but it would be incredibly difficult to do anything of the sort.

A nightmare would have descended across the Reich.  Even in Germany, Germans would not be safe from the SS - war-wounded veterans, amongst others, would be targeted for elimination.  Entire populations deemed inferior would be exterminated.  Millions upon millions would be ruthlessly slaughtered or enslaved.  It would be the end of the world as they knew it.

But would this Reich last for a thousand years?

That, of course, is the question.  I believe the answer is very definitely no, barring a considerable - and unlikely - degree of political reform.  The economy would grow weaker and weaker - while the US moved ahead - while no application of military force would be able to hide the Reich’s underlying weaknesses.  Would there be a semi-peaceful collapse, as Harry Turtledove speculated, or my outright civil war?

Perhaps we should be grateful that we will never know.

* * *

Christopher Nuttall is a long-standing alternate history fan and writer, author of Twilight of the Gods and numerous other books.  Check out his webpage and blog.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

New Releases 5/3/16

You can support The Update by clicking the banner to your right or the links below if you are purchasing through Amazon!

Hardcovers

Providence, Act 1 by Alan Moore

Alan Moore’s quintessential horror series has set the standard for a terrifying examination of the works of H.P. Lovecraft. It is being universally hailed as one of Moore’s most realized works in which the master scribe has controlled every iota of the story, art, and presentation. The result has been a masterpiece like no other, unparalleled in tone and content, and a true must have addition to his essential works in the field. For a limited one-time run, Avatar Press is presenting a collected Providence Act 1 Hard Cover edition that contains Providence issues #1-4, and all the back matter, which is limited to 6,666 copies. This edition will not be reprinted, there will not be a softcover edition, and this material will not be printed again until the complete collection is available in the far distant future. Don't miss your chance to enjoy the first piece of a true horror masterpiece and enter the creeping world of Providence.

Ring of Fire IV by Eric Flint

NEW YORK TIMES BEST-SELLING AUTHOR. CONTAINS A STORY BY DAVID BRIN AND AN ALL-NEW STORY BY ERIC FLINT. Collection #4 of rollicking and idea-packed alternate history tales written by today’s hottest science fiction writers and edited by New York Times best-seller Eric Flint. After a cosmic accident sets the modern-day West Virginia town of Grantville down in war-torn seventeenth century Europe, these everyday, resourceful Americans must adapt – or be trod into the dust of the past.

Let’s do the “Time Warp” again!  Another anthology of rollicking, thought-provoking collection of tales by a star-studded array of top writers such as David Brin and Eric Flint himself – all set in Eric Flint’s phenomenal Ring of Fire series.

A cosmic accident sets the modern West Virginia town of Grantville down in war-torn seventeenth century Europe.  It will take all the gumption of the resourceful, freedom-loving up-timers to find a way to flourish in a mad and bloody time.  Are they up for it?  You bet they are.  The fourth rollicking and idea-packed collection of Grantville tales edited and introduced by Eric Flint, and inspired by his now-legendary 1632.  Plus: contains an all-new story by Eric Flint.

Stories by Eric Flint, David Brin, David Carrico, Virginia DeMarce, Charles E. Gannon and more.

Paperbacks

The Change by SM Stirling

“[A] vivid portrait of a world gone insane,”* S. M. Stirling’s New York Times bestselling Novels of the Change have depicted a vivid, utterly persuasive, and absorbingly unpredictable postapocalyptic wasteland in which all modern technology has been left in ashes, forcing humankind to rebuild an unknowable new world in the wake of unimaginable—and deliberate—chaos.

In The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth, S. M. Stirling invites the most fertile minds in science fiction to join him in expanding his rich Emberverse canvas. Here are inventive new perspectives on the cultures, the survivors, and the battles arising across the years and across the globe following the Change—from the ruins of Sydney to the Republic of Fargo and Northern Alberta to Venetian and Greek galleys clashing in the Mediterranean.

These adventures revisit beloved people and places from Stirling’s fantastic universe, introduce us to new ones, and deliver endlessly fascinating challenges to conquer.

*Statesman Journal (Salem, OR)

Straits of Hell (Destroyermen) by Taylor Anderson

New York Times bestselling author Taylor Anderson’s phenomenal series of alternate history continues as a dangerous scheme throws the hope of honor, trust, and survival into chaos....

Transported to an alternate version of earth where WWII no longer rages, Matt Reddy and the crew of the Asiatic Fleet destroyer USS Walker have been trying to find their place in a strange new world—only to now face a game-changing conspiracy.

Reddy and his crew fight alongside the felinoid Lemurians and Imperial allies to keep the reptilian Grik, a race growing in supremacy, from reconquering the Lemurians’ ancestral home on Madagascar. But exhausted, far from reinforcements, and wildly outnumbered, the odds seem greater than ever before.

As for the fate of the Americas, Don Hernan and the evil Dominion have gathered to annihilate the forces behind the walls of Fort Defiance as a shadowy power with an agenda all its own rises with chilling resolve.

As the war teeters on a knife-edge, a tipping point may have been reached at last—and cold steel and hot-blooded valor will remain the ultimate weapons.

E-Books

Sons of Liberty (Royal Sorceress Book 4) by Chris Nuttall

The long-dreaded war between Britain and France has finally begun. French soldiers have landed on English soil and the British Army – and the Royal Sorcerers Corps, led by Lady Gwen – is moving to meet them. But when an inexperienced major disobeys her orders and sends two hundred hussars to their deaths, Gwen accidentally uses her magic to permanently damage his mind and sparks a political crisis at the worst possible time.

In the aftermath of the battle, Lord Mycroft suggests she leave Britain and head to the North American colonies, where British forces are anxiously awaiting a French offensive. The local sorcerers have been poisoned, the local government is barely keeping the colonies under control, the slaves are mutinous and revolution against the crown is brewing. The few locals with any known magical talent are untrained and certainly not ready for combat, but – if they can be trained in time – they may be all that stands between the colonies and defeat.

Accompanied by Irene Adler and Raechel Slater-Standish, agents of the British Crown, Gwen heads to North America. But it may be too late to save the colonies from a disaster that has been long in the making …

In ‘Sons of Liberty’, Gwen is sent from the relative safety of London to the colonies, where an undercurrent of revolution still abounds and intrigue and espionage are essential to keep the enemy at bay. But who exactly is the enemy? In the latest book in this exciting alternate history series, Christopher Nuttall expands Gwen’s horizons beyond Europe into the New World.

To readers, 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.

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Friday, January 1, 2016

Top 5 Posts from December 2015

I hope everyone is enjoying National Hangover Day. Here is the top 5 most viewed articles of December to help get you through the worst of it:

1) Map Monday: Europe, If Britain Had Won WW2 by Facthole by Matt Mitrovich.

2) Coming Soon in 2016 by Matt Mitrovich.

3) Weekly Update #214: The Massacre of Mankind, The Curse of Jacob Tracy and a New Segment Debuts! by Matt Mitrovich.

4) The Audio File: The Moonlit Road by Sam McDonald.

5) Interview: Chris Nuttall (Part 3).

* * *

Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judgeWhen not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Interview: Chris Nuttall (Part 3)

Welcome to what has become a tradition of The Update: the annual Chris Nuttall interview. Lets find out what is new with Chris:

Hello again, Chris. What have you been up to in your life since we last talked in 2014?

I’ve been very busy, really.  I’ve written three new Schooled In Magic books (Harry Potter/Lord of the Rings meets Lest Darkness Fall), a complete second trilogy of Ark Royal books (Warspite, A Savage War of Peace, A Small Colonial War) and several others.

And I’ve had a son <grin>.  Eric is approaching his first birthday now.

Congrats on becoming a Dad. How do you balance writing and your responsibilities as a parent?

With great difficultly.  I still try to write 9000 words a day, but I also try to spend time with him and managing the house.  I’m very glad I work from home.

What is your new book, Storm Front (Twilight Of The Gods I), about?

A Nazi Civil War.

Basically, in this universe, Hitler never declared war on the United States.  By now (1985), we have a cold war between the North Atlantic Alliance (a NATO-analogue) and the Third Reich, which stretches from Dunkirk to Kamchatka.  There hasn't been a second war because it would turn nuclear and destroy the world.  But cracks are appearing in the Reich and the economy is starting to collapse, leading to an eventual civil war.

What inspired you to write Storm Front?

The original idea came from an outline of Hitler’s war aims in Visions of Victory.  Many of his concepts were frankly absurd - he thought New Zealanders lived in trees - but he did have a fairly solid (and hellish) plan for what he intended to do in Europe after winning the war.  Entire nations would be crushed and erased from existence, or turned into nothing better than labour camps for the Reich.  I was curious enough to read further and started outlining what would have happened if Hitler had actually won control of the continent.  The sheer level of horror the Nazis would have unleashed is hard to imagine.

Not just, I should add, in terms of the holocaust and slavery.  The Nazis didn't quite see women as being only fit for cooking, cleaning and child-bearing, but they certainly got very close to it.  A young girl growing up in the Reich would have marginally more freedom than a girl growing up under the Taliban.  She certainly wouldn't be expected to do more than marry a German man (of the right bloodlines, naturally) and have his children.  The children themselves, meanwhile, would be taught Nazi propaganda instead of how to actually think.  They’d be brutalised if they dared show a flicker of independent thought.  And these kids would grow up absorbing the lesson that might made right - hell, they’d see Hitler’s nutty racial theories as being proven by the outcome of the war.

Midway through the plotting, I realised that the Reich would run into economic trouble very quickly.  Yes, the Germans had an unsurpassed reputation for technological innovation during the war, but most of their scientists and engineers were trained during the years prior to 1933, when Hitler assumed power.  I suspect a decade of being forced to swallow and regurgitate Nazi theories on science and suchlike (they originally dismissed nuclear research as Jewish science) would destroy their future great minds and the United States would race ahead, as it did in OTL.  Indeed, there would be more impetus for the US to race ahead because the Nazis would look far more threatening than the Russians.

So I reasoned, eventually, that something would have to break.

Historically, of course, the closest analogue would be the Fall of the Soviet Union, a comparison Turtledove makes in one of his books.  However, I have a feeling that the Reich would not collapse so easily.  Hard-liners would insist they could tighten their belts and carry on, while soft-liners would see the need to make political reforms ... which the hard-liners would see as threatening to their power.  So any counterpart of the attempted coup in Moscow might end very badly.

In the book, of course, this would lead directly to civil war.

Does Storm Front have a lot of parallels with how the Soviet Union fell in our timeline?

Not that many, I think - there’s a strong similarity in how the economy simply couldn't keep up with the demands of the cold war (and an Afghanistan analogue in South Africa) but there’s no slow erosion of the ruling class’s confidence that led to Gorbachov and eventually Yeltsin.  It actually has more in common with Libya, although Nazi Germany is a very different kettle of fish.

What was the greatest challenge in writing the book?

Making the characters sympathetic, even though they’re German Nazis.

Think about it.  Anyone raised in that sort of environment is going to be a little unpleasant by our standards.  They’re raised to hate Jews, for example, although their mental image of Jews bears no relationship at all to reality.  (Turtledove’s concept of a group of Jews surviving in the middle of Berlin is actually quite possible, as long as they’re careful.)  They see Untermensch (Subhumans) as ... well, Subhumans.  Even the most progressive of them doesn't treat any unfortunate ‘guest-worker’ any better than black slaves were treated in the CSA.  The men, in particular, are taught to protect German women, but not to consider them equals.  The idea that a woman should control her own destiny is alien to them.

Gudrun, our heroine, is pretty much a rebel by their standards.  Her policeman father, by contrast, genuinely loves her (and the rest of his family) but he doesn't understand her and doesn't see anything wrong with organising her marriage to someone of his choice.  He was reluctant to allow her to attend the university - he argues that no one would hire a woman for anything serious and he does have a point -  and could withdraw her at any moment ... and no one would object.  He’s the master of the house, as far as the Reich is concerned.  To us, he would be a monster; to them, he’s actually a far more tolerant father than many others.

One might argue that Gudrun, Horst and the other heroes are a little self-centered.  There’s some truth in that, because even the brightest amongst them have been shaped by the Reich.  But when they open their eyes, they start seeing their world in all its horror.

Who designed the cover?

Brad Fraunfelter (www.BFillustration.com).  He’s also responsible for the Schooled in Magic covers.

Any new projects in the works?

I’m currently planning the start of a third Ark Royal trilogy, starting with Vanguard.  After that, I have a fourth Royal Sorceress book to write (steampunk meets alternate history) and a twelfth The Empire’s Corps book.  And there are two more Twilight of the Gods being planned.

Monday, May 4, 2015

Weekly Update #189

Editor's Note

So I think I have had a long enough break since my Britain trip that its time to get back to some serious writing. Starting this week I am going to begin the long process of cutting my Sideways in Time paper to a more appropriate length. Hopefully that doesn't mean I will have to cut back on my writing elsewhere. In fact the schedule for this week is pretty much locked in, so that is good. If I can keep up the pace of 6 articles a week (counting my work at Amazing Stories) I think I can keep delivering alternate history content to you guys and work on my other projects.

Also no Map Monday this week. Sorry, but nothing inspired me enough to write about it.

And now the news...

What do the critics think of Hi Hitler! by Gavriel Rosenfeld?

Gavriel Rosenfeld, proprietor of The Counterfactual History Review, has a new book out called Hi Hitler! which discusses the normalization of Nazism in modern culture. Here is the description from Amazon:

The Third Reich's legacy is in flux. For much of the post-war period, the Nazi era has been viewed moralistically as an exceptional period of history intrinsically different from all others. Since the turn of the millennium, however, this view has been challenged by a powerful wave of normalization. Gavriel D. Rosenfeld charts this important international trend by examining the shifting representation of the Nazi past in contemporary western intellectual and cultural life. Focusing on works of historical scholarship, popular novels, counterfactual histories, feature films, and Internet websites, he identifies notable changes in the depiction of the Second World War, the Holocaust, and the figure of Adolf Hitler himself. By exploring the origins of these works and assessing the controversies they have sparked in the United States and Europe, Hi Hitler! offers a fascinating and timely analysis of the shifting status of the Nazi past in western memory.

The book got a lot of attention last week when Richard Evans (Altered Pasts) critiqued the book on The Guardian. He summed up Hi Hitler! by saying "Rosenfeld’s book is engrossing and thought-provoking, but in the end it does not convince." Well not the best review, but I guess there is no such thing as bad publicity. Speaking of publicity, Gavriel discussed stories where Hitler survives his death over at The Conversation. Go check it out and let us know what you think.

What do the critics think of Mary Robinette Kowal's Of Noble Family?

The always delightful Mary Robinette Kowal has published the conclusion to her Glamourist Histories series. Its called Of Nobel Family and here is the description from Amazon:

Jane and Vincent have finally gotten some much-needed rest after their adventures in Italy when Vincent receives word that his estranged father has passed away on one of his properties in the West Indies. His brother, who manages the estate, is overwhelmed, and no one else in his family can go. Grudgingly, out of filial duty the couple decide to go.

The sea voyage is long and Jane spends enough time unable to perform glamour that towards the end of the trip she discovers that she is with child. They are overjoyed, but when they finally arrive at the estate to complete what they expect to be routine legal tasks, they realize that nearly everything they came expecting to find had been a lie. Also, the entire estate is in disarray, with horrifying conditions and tensions with the local slave population so high that they are close to revolt.

Jane and Vincent's sense of peril is screaming out for them to flee, but Vincent cannot stand to leave an estate connected with his family in such a condition. They have survived many grand and terrifying adventures in their time, but this one will test their skills and wits more than any they have ever encountered before, this time with a new life hanging in the balance. Mary Robinette Kowal's Of Noble Family is the final book of the acclaimed Glamourist Histories.

Paul Weimer at SF Signal called it a "[s]trong endgame for the series and an excellent use of events from previous novels. Vincent and Jane continue to grow and glow as characters." Well it looks like Paul enjoyed the book, but if you want to know Mary's favorite bit of Of Noble Family, check out her post on her site. She also will be on book tour starting tomorrow.

Videos for Alternate Historians

Remember when I posted that teaser trailer on Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, yeah turns out they released a longer version not much later:
Looks pretty good. Can't wait. Now lets figure out how to start our own country:
Fascinating and the rules to creating your own country should apply to future off-world colonies. Now lets dive back to the past and find out how to live forever:
You got to love the effort they put into creating these Vsauce videos. Anywho, Sean Korsgaard filmed the alternate history panel at Ravencon 2015, featuring another familiar face here at The Update, Chris Nuttall:
I haven't listened to the whole panel, so watch at your own risk.

Links to the Multiverse

Books & Short Fiction

2015 Readers Choice Awards at Steampunk Chronicles.
AURELIA - excerpt by Alison Morton.
Gideon Smith cover gallery by David Barnett at Postcards From The Hinterland.
Message Fiction: Politics in Sci-Fi and Fantasy Literature by The G at Tor.
Representing Marginalized Voices in Historical Fiction and Fantasy at Strange Horizons.
Review: Joe Steele by Harry Turtledove at That's What I'm Talking About.
Roma Novan family trees by Alison Morton.
The Strange Horizons Book Club: Hild by Nicola Griffith at Strange Horizons.
These incredible paintings of sci-fi suburbia are finally turning into a book at The Verge.
To Explore Strange Old Worlds, to Seek Out Old Civilizations at Strange Horizons.

Counterfactuals, History & News

7 Lesser-Known Victorian Inventors Who Were Just As Fascinating As Tesla at io9.
Abbott Orders Texas Guard to 'Monitor' Planned Military Exercises at NPR.
Deep, deep south: Brazilians proudly celebrate their Confederate ancestry at The Guardian.
Great Moments in Peaceful Protest History at The Nib.
The most racist places in America, according to Google at The Washington Post.

Film & Television

It's Still Alive! Modern Adaptations of Frankenstein by Sarah Clare at Hodderscape.
Outlander 1.12: Black Jack's Progeny at Paul Levinson's Infinite Regress.

Games

7 Games We Saw in Action That Never Came Out by Keza MacDonald at Kotaku.
Can a game show us what would happen under far-right rule? at Boing Boing.

Graphic Novels & Comics

The Complete History Of The Joker's Many, Many Incarnations by James Whitbrook at io9.

Interviews

Brooke Johnson at My Bookish Ways.
Michael J Martinez at SF Signal.
Gareth L. Powell at The Gutterbound Stargazer.

Podcasts

Dissecting Worlds Series 9 – Episode 6: Special Circumstances at Geel Syndicate.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. 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.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

New Releases 11/11/14

You can support The Update by clicking the banner to your right or the links below if you are purchasing through Amazon!

Paperbacks

The Mammoth Book of Gaslit Romance edited by Ekaterina Sedia

A fantastic collection of stories of love and intrigue that focus on the trappings of the popular Victorian era, enlivened with fantastical elements and incorporating some noir and detective pieces, by O. M. Grey, Leanna Renee Hieber, N. K. Jemisin, Eliza Knight, Sarah Prineas, Delia Sherman, Genevieve Valentine and many more.

Full list of contributors: Vivian Caethe; Leanna Renee Hieber; Seth Cadin; Tiffany Trent; Eliza Knight; Sara Harvey; Rick Bowes; Genevieve Valentine; Nisi Shawl; Maurice Broaddus; Ella D’Arcy; E. Catherine Tobler; Sarah Prineas; Barbara Roden; Mary Braddon; Mae Empson; Caroline Stevermer; Delia Sherman; Tansy Roberts; N. K. Jemisin; O.M. Grey.


The Traders' War -- an omnibus edition of the third and fourth novels in Charles Stross's Merchant Princes series.
Miriam was an ambitious business journalist in Boston. Until she was fired—then discovered, to her shock, that her lost family comes from an alternate reality. And although some of them are trying to kill her, she won’t stop digging up secrets. Now that she knows she’s inherited the family ability to walk between worlds, there’s a new culture to explore.
Her alternate home seems located around the Middle Ages, making her world-hopping relatives top dogs when it comes to “importing” guns and other gadgets from modern-day America. Payment flows from their services to U.S. drug rings—after all, world-skipping drug runners make great traffickers. In a land where women are property, she struggles to remain independent. Yet her outsider ways won’t be tolerated, and a highly political arranged marriage is being brokered behind her back. If she can stay alive for long enough to protest.


Ex-Confederate officer Captain Marcus Wayward and his infamous “Eight” are on a deadly mission. The Union has contracted them to find and kill the most notorious scientist in the world; Doctor Burson Carpathian, who resides somewhere in the forested interior of Arizona. Carpathian is protected by an undead horde of his own construction, and powered by the miracle fuel RJ-1027, they will defend him to the death. 

The chance for Wayward and his mercenaries to acquire fame, fortune, and immortality on such a mission is too great to refuse. The journey is fraught with perils and pitfalls – outlaws, Union troopers, thrill-seekers, Shifters of the Warrior Nation, and even other mercenaries hell-bent on finding and killing Carpathian first. When a shadowy force known as the Dark Council gets involved, the way becomes even deadlier. But the biggest challenge for Captain Wayward could very well be his own people, who begin to question the nature of the mission as it unravels.

E-books

1636: The Barbie Consortium by Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett

Prequel to 1636: The Viennese Waltz. The Barbies are rising. After their West Virginia town is transported to 1630s continental Europe, a group of teenage girls discover that bringing future technology and future business practices to a backward Europe just emerging from the Middle Ages can be very lucrative indeed—and might even change the course of empire.

The Mind's Eye by Christopher Nuttall

For centuries, men have been dreaming of telepathy, the power to read and influence the minds of others. Now, all around the world, telepaths are finally starting to appear. Men and women are developing awesome powers with the potential to dramatically change society. Governments are soon starting to become aware of them, even recruiting them, while striving to keep knowledge of their abilities hidden from the general public. Academic researchers too are discovering telepaths and it isn’t long before awareness of their existence starts to spread. But non-telepaths, ordinary people, don’t want to have their minds read or controlled; the telepaths soon find themselves widely regarded with fear and hatred. Inevitably, some of them want to fight back. 

In this alternative history, albeit set in the near-future, Christopher Nuttall explores the likely impact of the appearance of telepathic abilities in some members of the human race. While telepathy and related psionic abilities have long been a mainstay of science-fiction, the impact of their emergence has not been as well imagined as, say, that of fantastic mutations. Almost everyone has something to hide, thoughts they wouldn’t want made public. Governments have secrets they wish to keep, whether for national security or just to hold on to power. How would the general populace react to mind-readers in their midst? How would telepaths respond when threatened by a frightened mob, or constrained by politicians fearful of the disclosure of scandals and long-buried secrets. Intelligence agencies would be both alarmed at the threats and intrigued by the possibilities. Would all nations respond in the same way? 

And then there’s the endless possibilities for criminals and terrorists…

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. Check out his short fiction. 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.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Weekly Update #157

Editor's Note

So it looks like I will once again fail in my goal to read all of the Sidewise nominated works before the awards are announced. I just was unable to read 1920: America's Great War by Robert Conroy in time. O well it happens. Perhaps I will get to it eventually and if Conroy wins I will especially make an effort to read and review it.

Thanks again to everyone who buys through Amazon by clicking on our banner. We don't receive much from Amazon, but every little bit helps us continue to bring the best alternate history news from across the Internet.

And now the news...

Cosmonaut Anatolii Artsebarskii to appear at Loncon 3 

Those interested in the history of space exploration will be please to hear that former cosmonaut Anatolii Pavlovich Artsebarskii will be attending Loncon 3 and has agreed to participate in the program. He will speak on Sunday, August 17th.

Born on September 9, 1956, Artsebarskii was the commander of the Soyuz TM-12 mission in 1991. He flew it to the Mir space station with crew Sergei Krikalev and British astronaut Helen Sharman, and spent a total of 144 days in space. Artsebarskii carried out six spacewalks, with a total time of more than 32 hours, most of which was spent building the Sofora space tower onto Mir's engine control module.

Artsebarskii and Krikalev were in orbit during the attempted Soviet coup in August 1991. He also holds the awards of Hero of The Soviet Union, Pilot-cosmonaut of the USSR, the Order of Lenin, and the medal "For accomplishments in exploration of outer space".

And if you are interested in the alternate history of space exploration, may I recommend Ian Sales' "Adrift on the Sea of Rains", "The Eye with Which the Universe Beholds Itself" and "Then Will The Great Ocean Wash Deep Above" (all of which I reviewed).

Out Now: Necropolis by Chris Nuttall

Friend of The Update Chris Nuttall has a new book out. It is called Necropolis and its the third book of the Royal Sorceress series. Here is the description from Amazon:

The British Empire is teetering on the brink of war with France. A war that may, for the first time, see magicians in the ranks on both sides. The Royal Sorceress, Lady Gwendolyn Crichton, will be responsible for the Empire’s magical resources when the time comes. Still struggling to overcome prejudice within the Royal College of Sorcerers, she has at least earnt the gratitude of much of the aristocracy, if not their respect. Just when Gwen needs to be firmly focussed on training new sorcerers, her adopted daughter Olivia, the only known living necromancer, is kidnapped. Her abduction could signal a terrible new direction in the impending war. But Intelligence soon establishes that it was Russian agents who took Olivia, so an incognito Gwen joins a British diplomatic mission to Russia, an uncertain element in the coming conflict. Once she has arrived in St Petersburg, she discovers that the Tsar is deranged and with the help of a mad monk has a plan that threatens the entire world. 

Immediately following on from ‘The Great Game’, ‘Necropolis’ sees Gwen thrust into the wider international arena as political unrest spreads throughout Europe and beyond, threatening to hasten an almighty conflict. Once again Christopher Nuttall combines exciting fantasy with believable alternate history that is almost close enough for us to touch.

Videos for Alternate Historians

Only one video this week per se. Its a review of the WWI action-adventure game Valiant Hearts done by History Respawned:
However it did remind me that Yahtzee of Zero Punctuation fame did an earlier review that I never showed you before:
Still very cool that someone made a video game about World War I.

Links to the Multiverse

Books


1636 The Viennese Waltz – Snippet 10 and 11 by Eric Flint.
The Baskerville Affair by Emma Jane Holloway at The Qwillery.
Eric Brown on the exploration of change in steampunk at A Fantastical Librarian.
The Mechanical – the stunning new Ian Tregillis novel at Orbit.
This Month's Book Pick ~ Clockwork Heart by Dru Pagliassotti by Gail Carriger.
The Story Behind Hild by Nicola Griffith: Freed by Constraint at Upcoming4.Me.
Up Now–Necropolis (The Royal Sorceress III) by Chris Nuttall at The Chrishanger.

Counterfactuals, History and News

Can an Independent Kurdistan Reshape the Middle East? by Jonathan Foreman at Newsweek.
Ron Rosenbaum on Whether the Holocaust Would Have Happened Without Hitler by Gavriel D. Rosenfeld at The Counterfactual History Review.
The Weirdest Micronations That Have Ever Existed by Vincze Miklos at io9.

Film and Television

10 Alternate Versions Of Characters That Were Better Than The Originals by Charlie Jane Anders at io9.
Check Out These Incredible Unused Jurassic Park Posters by John Alvin at IGN.
STARZ "Outlander" combines genres in a satisfying mash-up by AK Easton at Examiner.com.
Stunning Concept Art From The Battlestar Galactica You Never Saw by Charlie Jane Anders at io9.
Undead: ‘Pride And Prejudice And Zombies’ Resurrected With Lily James, Sam Riley, Bella Heathcote To Star by Nancy Tartaglione at Deadline.

Games

80 Days is the Alternate-Reality, Anti-Colonialism Adventure We All Deserve by Jess Joho at Kill Screen.
Dwarf NORAD: A Glimpse of Counterfactual Computing History by Peter Christiansen at Play the Past.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. 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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