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365 pages, Paperback
First published April 19, 1996
"Lion Time in Timbuctoo," Robert Silverberg - Funny and racy goings on in a world run by everyone but the Europeans.
"Ike at the Mike," Howard Waldrop - Maybe the least believable story in the bunch, in which Senator E. Aaron Presley swings to the jazzy sounds of clarinetist Dwight "Ike" Eisenhower.
"Over There," Mike Resnick - Teddy Roosevelt takes his Rough Riders into the meat grinder of the Western Front during WWI.
"Suppose They Gave a Peace...," Susan Schwartz - Eugene McCarthy defeats Nixon, the U.S. leaves Vietnam in defeat, and an MIA veteran's father makes a new sort of peace when he discovers he has a Vietnamese daughter-in-law... and a grandchild.
"All the Myriad Ways," Larry Niven - Schroedinger's characters are alive and dead.
"The Sleeping Serpent," Pamela Sargent - Powerful story about a Mongol-dominated Old World and a New World soon to be controlled by an Iroquois-Mongol confederation.
"Catch That Zeppelin!" Fritz Leiber - odd alternate history in which Thomas Edison and Marie Curie get married, have a supergenius son, and pave the way to an era of world peace and helium-powered airships.
"Through Road No Whither," Greg Bear - Nazis encounter God, and She saves her chosen children.
"Ship Full of Jews," Barry N. Malzberg - Columbus sails to the Indies with ships full of Jews, criminals, and other personae non grata from 1492 Spain.
"Archetypes," Harry Turtledove - the Roman Empire never ended, Mouamet became a Christian saint instead of the founder of Islam, and movable print is invented--in the 20th century--with hilarious consequences.
"We Could Do Worse," Gregory Benford - Joe McCarthy is President, Richard Nixon in his running mate, and brown-shirted thuggery runs rampant in the U.S.
"The Winterberry," Nicholas A. Dichario - strangely affecting epistolary story told by a brain-damaged JFK who secretly survived the shooting in Dealey Plaza.
"The Lucky Strike," Kim Stanley Robinson - wonderful five-star finale about the first atom bomb, moral courage and its consequences, and how the actions we make as individuals can tip the scales of world affairs.