Book Description
What if Gandhi and his army of pacifists faced down the Nazis? What would Philip K. Dick and Richard M. Nixon have said to one another? These and other wild imaginings of events that never occurred make up this prime collection of alternate histories. Written over fifty years, culled from the pages of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, these 15 tales enthrall readers drawn to the fantastic, the meta-real, the might-have-been. Contributors include Sci-Fi/Fantasy legends C.M. Kornbluth, Ben Bova, Robert Silverberg, Harry Turtledove, Alfred Bester, and Poul Anderson.
One Lamp: Alternate History Stories from The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction FROM OUR EDITORS
The Barnes & Noble Review
Fans of alternate history are in for a treat! One Lamp is a collection of some of the best speculative short stories from the pages of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. From Golden Age classics like "The Men Who Murdered Mohammed" by Alfred Bester and "Two Dooms" by C. M. Kornbluth to stories from modern-day masters like Paul Di Filippo and Bradley Denton, this anthology is absolutely superb.
Although the collection is full of big-name authors like Harry Turtledove, Ben Bova, Poul Anderson, and James Morrow, some of the most memorable stories are by relatively unknown writers like Dana Wilde and Charles Coleman Finlay. Wilde's "The Green Moon" chronicles a man living through past history that is actually changing before his eyes, blurring the line between perceptiveness and insanity. Finlay's "We Come Not to Praise Washington," set in the late 18th century, has Aaron Burr pleading the case of the exiled Thomas Jefferson to President Alexander Hamilton.
Also included are stories built around the following premises: an America ruled by Nazi Germany; a postᄑglobal warming society in which infertile infants are killed by priests in the name of God; a surreal meeting between Philip K. Dick and Richard Nixon; a time traveler's attempt to avert the sinking of the Lusitania; and a Roma Eterna story by Robert Silverberg. In the introduction, editor Gordon Van Gelder describes the alternate-history genre as "the purest form of 'what if' speculation."
This collection contains 14 literary gems of unadulterated "what if." In a word: brilliant. Paul Goat Allen
FROM THE PUBLISHER
The alternate history story is probably the purest form of "what if" speculation. From earthshaking encounters, such as Gandhi's pacifists facing down the Nazis, to absurd ones, such as Philip K. Dick hobnobbing with Richard M. Nixon, this book explores what-might-have-been, pasts that never were.
The fifteen stories gathered here were written from the 1950s to just last year. They appeared in the pages of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and were selected by that publication's editor, the legendary Gordon Van Gelder.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
One Lamp: Alternate History Stories from the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, edited by Gordon Van Gelder, reprints 14 "what if?" tales from such SF luminaries as C.M. Kornbluth, Poul Anderson, Alfred Bester and Harry Turtledove. As Van Gelder notes in his introduction, the American Civil War and WWII remain the most common subjects in this popular subgenre. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.