I just finished reading The Peshawar Lancers, by S.M. Stirling. I really, really liked it. I mean, it wasn't quite as good as the very best Alt History I've ever read (The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson) and it wasn't quite as awesome as my very favorite Alt History of ever (Celestial Matters by Richard Garfinkle). But those are pretty lofty marks to reach and Peshawar came damn close on both accounts. I seriously loved it. The premise is that in the 1870s, during PM Disraeli's term in office, there was a series of comet/asteroid strikes in the northern hemisphere, causing tsunamis and nuclear winters. And all the collateral damage of rioting and chaos and starvation and cannibalism and destruction that would go along with such an event. Disraeli was foresighted enough to evacuate a large percentage of the British populace, most to India, some to South Africa and Australia. Queen Victoria went to India and so the captial of the British Empire became Delhi. The book then takes place in the early 21st century. Clearly there was a massively different political structure at play in the world, as well as science and technology. But that's the fun of alternate histories. You get to really see how things would come to be with just a small change here or there. And the plot centered around palace intrigue and political conspiracies, so it was just an all around great adventure. Taking place in India, with lots of Hindi tossed in, so of course I adored that.
I came to realize during the course of the book that Jared Diamond's Guns, Germs, and Steel was kind of like the perfect reference material for writers of alt histories. Christie had loaned me that a couple of years ago and I never dreamed that it would come up so much. Heck, I overheard a couple of guys at work discussing it this week. But Diamond's precise research into just how much impact science and technology has on not just the country of origin is key to planning your future in an alternate timeline. It has to be believable. It has to be real. It has to be logical. You have to learn just as much as you would reading a proper [well-researched] historical novel. And I really appreciate that thoroughness when reading. Otherwise it's just a fantasy novel. Not that I don't love those, too! Especially the ones that come with maps. And appendices.
Saturday, June 10, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
3 comments:
Heh. Maps and appendices are fun, aren't they?
I love alt histories. I really have to get me a copy of these books. I agree with you that the thought and study that goes into this kind of story accentuates the pleasure of reading it.
I've heard of Guns Germs and Steel. Now I'm thinking I ought to read it too.
Oh, and I've been meaning to point out that I love the description on the sidebar of the scarf you've been knitting since the beginning of this blog. You are so funny!
I actually looked at a copy of Guns, Germs, and Steel at the bookstore just yesterday. I didn't buy it, but now I with I would have!
Thanks, Ana. I see that scarf every night, just staring at me, taunting me to finally finish it and be done.
And you guys should totally read GG&S. I think you'd both really like it.
Post a Comment