Path: ...!feeds.phibee-telecom.net!2.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan ) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: Re: RI October 2024 Date: 21 Nov 2024 04:10:24 GMT Organization: loft Lines: 182 Message-ID: References: X-Trace: individual.net 9tc20LzRhR01iGLMXzoERwg66DkgjS0+sVo3PIgz6JTIHGkNTq X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:8iuRcb4pOk9Lt/RIxlkss497ncM= sha256:hjmIhRe4mWhdyxlcrV86/ACGDK5iqXy6Y5cKBBQ2YF0= X-Newsreader: trn 4.0-test76 (Apr 2, 2001) Bytes: 8430 In article , William Hyde wrote: >Lynn McGuire wrote: >> On 11/19/2024 1:21 PM, William Hyde wrote: >>> Ted Nolan wrote: >>>> In article , >>>> William Hyde  wrote: >>>>> Ted Nolan wrote: >>>>>> Here we are again, possibly less late than usual with books from >>>>>> October. >>>>>> As is traditional (and possibly required): The links below are Amazon >>>>>> affiliate ones which could potentially earn me something should you >>>>>> choose to buy through one. >>>>>> >>>>>> ==== >>>>>> >>>>>> Acts of War: A World War II Alternative History >>>>>> (The Usurper's War Book 1) >>>>>> by James Young >>>>>> https://amzn.to/3UAZsmc >>>>>> >>>>>> Collisions of the Damned: The Defense of the Dutch East Indies >>>>>> (The Usurper's War Book 2) >>>>>> by James Young >>>>>> https://amzn.to/3AryUx3 >>>>>> >>>>>> Here's the first two books of what I believe is to be an alt-hist >>>>>> WWII trilogy. >>>>>> >>>>>> The jumping off point for this universe is that the British take >>>>>> out Hitler in a bombing raid on Berlin.  They had no idea where he >>>>>> was -- it was just one of those lucky accidents of war.  Or, in >>>>>> this case unlucky accidents of war. >>>>>> >>>>>> Unlucky because taking out Hitler proved a very good thing for the >>>>>> Germans.  Himmler came in after sidelining Goering (possibly fatally, >>>>>> I don't quite recall), >>>>> >>>>> Plausible enough, but I suspect that "Der Treue Heinrich" would have >>>>> been dead in the same ditch as Goering and the generals would have >>>>> taken >>>>> over, in effect at least.  Perhaps with a nonentity like Hess as >>>>> titular >>>>> leader. >>>>> >>>>> Of the leaders only Goebbels had any talent for backstabbing, but I >>>>> don't think the army would put up with him. >>>>> >>>>> Besides, if the author wants a German leader who is keen on peace >>>>> Goering is the ideal choice.  Having looted to his heart's content, he >>>>> was happy to enjoy his wealth and status (and morphine) without the >>>>> risks of war. >>>>> >>>>>   and said to the Brits basically: Look Hitler >>>>>> was really a loose cannon and things got out of hand.  What's done >>>>>> is done, and we're not giving back anything our boys died for, but >>>>>> is there really any reason we still need to be at war? >>>>>> >>>>>> Churchill said 'yes', but was eventually turfed out in favor of >>>>>> Eden >>>>> >>>>> Let me guess, the author looked up a list of UK cabinet members and >>>>> threw a dart?  Eden was well down the list of possible PMs at this >>>>> point, with only the war having restored him to the leading circle from >>>>> the pariah status he was consigned to in the late 1930s. >>>>> >>>>> And if peace broke out certainly an appeaser like Halifax would have >>>>> been handed the job.  Might as well say they gave the PM position to >>>>> Brendan Bracken. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>>   who turned out to be what some people have always suspected >>>>>> and made peace. >>>>> >>>>> And some people think that Washington was George III's illegitimate >>>>> son. >>>>> >>>>> Or at least I could convince some of that. >>>>> >>>>> Sounds like an author to avoid. >>>>> >>>>> William Hyde >>>>> >>>> >>>> No, this is entirely my fault.  Rather than going back to the book >>>> while I was writing the review, I was going on my memory which was >>>> entirely wrong on at least two issues: battle cruiser vs battleship >>>> and Halifax vs Eden.  I don't know why I had Eden on the brain when >>>> I was definitely familiar with Halifax, but it was Halifax who was >>>> the accommodationist PM in this setting, not Eden. >>> >>> Makes sense then. >>> >>> An author not to be avoided. >>> >>> I'm still going to run with the George III thing as soon as I can find >>> a likely victim. >>> >>> >>> >>> William Hyde >> >> Seeing as George III was born in 1738 and George Washington was born in >> 1732, that did not happen. > >So says fake history. > >William Hyde > > "There is the leaky past, but it cannot leak out fast enough for safety," Barnaby had taken up his tale again. He always came as directly as possible to a point, but the point was often a tricky one. "The staggering corpus of past events, and of non-central or nonconsensus events, is diminished swiftly. More and more things that once happened are now made not to have happened. This is absolute necessity, I suppose, even though the flesh between the lines (it is, I guess, the supposedly expunged flesh) should scream from the agony of the compression. "Velikovsky was derided for writing that six hundred years must be subtracted from Egyptian history and from all ancient history. He shouldn't have been derided, but he did have it backwards. Indeed, six times six hundred years must be added to history again and again to approach the truth of the matter. It'd be dangerous to do it, though. It's crammed as tight as it will go now, and there's tremors all along the fault lines. As a matter of fact, several decades have been left out of quite recent United States history. They should be put back in for they're interesting, and we ourselves lived through parts of them--if it were safe to do so." "How about the count of the years and their present total?" Harry O'Donovan asked. "Are they right or are they not? Is this really the year that it says it is on that calendar on the wall? And, if it is, doesn't that make nonsense about leaving out recent decades?" "The count of the years is true, in that it is one aspect of the truth," Barnaby said a little bit fumblingly. "But there are other aspects. They call into question the whole nature of simultaneity." "What doesn't?" Harry O'Donovan said. "There are taboos in mathematics," Barnaby tried to explain. "The idea of the involuted number series is taboo, and yet we live in a time that is counted by such a series. And when time is fleshed, when it puts on History for its clothes, it follows even more the involuted series in which there are very, very many numbers between one and ten." "Just what do you have in mind, Barney?" Cris Benedetti asked him. "I have never discovered any historical event happening for the first time," Barnaby said. "Either life imitates anecdote, or very much more has happened than the bursting records are allowed to show as happening. As far back as one can track it, there is history: and I do not mean prehistory. I doubt if there was ever such a time as prehistory. I doubt that there was ever an uncivilized man. I also doubt that there was ever any manlike creature who was not full man, however unconventional the suit of hide that he wore. "But when you try to compress a hundred thousand years of history into six thousand years, something has to give. When you try to compress a million years, it becomes dangerous. An involuted number series, particularly when applied to the spate of years, becomes a tightly coiled spring of primordial spring-steel. When it recoils, look out! There comes the revenge of things left out. "Were there eight kings of the name of Henry in England, or were there eighty? Never mind: someday it will be recorded that there was only one, and the attributes of all of them will be combined into his compressed and consensus story. -- columbiaclosings.com What's not in Columbia anymore..