Five Faves is a meme sponsored by Gilion at Rose City Reader. As she says....
There are times when a full-sized book list is just too much; when the
Top 100, a Big Read, or all the Prize winners seem like too daunting an
effort. That's when a short little list of books grouped by theme may be
just the ticket. Inspired by Nancy Pearl's "Companion Reads" chapter in Book Lust
– themed clusters of books on subjects as diverse as Bigfoot and
Vietnam – I decided to start occasionally posting lists of five books
grouped by topic or theme. I call these posts my Five Faves.
This week's theme is Alternate Histories. Alternate histories give the reader a chance to think about what might have been and to imagine how changes in the past could affect our present. I have always enjoyed speculative fiction--whether that might be an imagining of humanity's future (usually in space) or stories about how we might have been different. Here are some of my favorites.
Island in the Sea of Time by S. M. Stirling: A startling time-travel phenomenon
has occurred. The island of Nantucket has been swept into the long-ago
past. With its inhabitants adrift in the year 1250 B.C., there is only
one question to be answered: Can they survive?
West of Eden by Harry Harrison: What if the dinosaurs hadn't died out? What if the reptiles had survived to evolve intelligent life? A rich, dramatic saga of a
world where the descendents of the dinosaurs struggled with a clan of
humans in a battle for survival.
The Way It Wasn't: Great Science Fiction Stories of Alternate History by Martin H. Greenberg & Robert Silverberg (eds): An amusing,
intellectually stimulating excursion into speculative history by renowned science fiction writers, telling
what things might be like if... Elvis Presley weren't the "King" but the
President of the United States ("Ike at the Mike" by Howard Waldrop)...
The Black Death had killed the entire population of Europe in the
fourteenth century ("Lion Time in Timbuctoo" by Robert Silverberg)...
John F. Kennedy had survived the 1963 shooting in Dallas ("The
Winterberry" by Nicholas A. DiChario) and more.
Murder & Magic by Randall Garrett: A world where Richard the Lion-Hearted did not die at the Siege of Chaluz
and the House of Plantagenet rules England and a mighty empire even in
the 1960s. This is also a world where Magic is science and all the usual
scientific methods are underwritten by magical laws and procedures.
There is no blood-typing by microscope...it is all discerned by the Law
of Sympathy.
Timeline by Michael Crichton: Archaeologists make a shocking discovery at a medieval site. Suddenly they
are swept off to the headquarters of a secretive multinational
corporation that has developed an astounding technology. Now this group
is about to get a chance not to study the past but to enter it. And with
history opened up to the present, the dead awakened to the living,
these men and women will soon find themselves fighting for their very
survival -- six hundred years ago.
Bev -- Thanks for playing along with my Five Faves meme!
ReplyDeleteSo far, I've just been doing it when inspiration strikes. But if it catches on, it could become a weekly event. I hope so!
I've jotted down several of these titles and will investigate. Thanks for this.
ReplyDelete