Showing posts with label Space Race. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space Race. Show all posts

Monday, November 17, 2014

Map Monday: Map of Venus by NuclearVacuum

AlternateHistory.com is certainly the center of the alternate history community, but it is not the only gathering of alternate historians on the Internet. As some of you may know, I was long-time contributor and administrator to the AltHistory Wiki and I am pleased to feature a map from that site now:
Above is the "Map of Venus" from NuclearVacuum's Venusian Haven timeline. I haven't read much of the timeline, but from what I can gather this is a timeline where Venus develops into a planet that can support life. This leads to an alternate space race where the Soviet Union becomes the first to colonize the planet, followed by the United States and other nations.

I have always appreciated NuclearVacuum's maps for their minimalist style and "Map of Venus" is no exception. This is just a bare bones political map, but it does the job well and its probably not far off from what Venus from Stirling's The Sky People would look like in that timeline's future.

Honorable mentions this week go out to Rvbomally's Doomed to Repetition, the alternate map of Africa where it is never colonized by Europeans that is making the rounds again and the many maps of SRegan that he has gathered on deviantart. If you want to submit a map for the next Map Monday, email me at ahwupdate at gmail dot com with your map attached and a brief description in the body of the email.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Preview: Then Will The Great Ocean Wash Deep Above by Ian Sales

Friend of The Update, Ian Sales, was kind enough to offer me a copy of the third entry in the Apollo Quartet, "Then Will The Great Ocean Wash Deep Above". For those who don't know, the first entry, "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" won the 2012 British Science Fiction Association Award and was nominated for the 2012 Sidewise Awards. I also thought the sequel, "The Eye with Which the Universe Beholds Itself" was pretty good as well.

Here is the description of the story from the press release:
In 1951, General MacArthur launches a series of offensives against the North Korean and Chinese armies, and pushes them across the border into China. The Soviets enter the war, and fighting intensifies. By 1957, when Sputnik is launched, there is still no end in sight to the Korean War. So when NASA is formed in 1958 and astronauts are needed to counter the USSR’s space programme, the US Administration looks to arctic explorers, mountain climbers and other adventurous non-military personnel as candidates. 
When women pilots prove to be better qualified – both medically and in terms of the necessary skills – President Eisenhower reluctantly agrees to allow thirteen women to become the USA’s first astronauts. As the Korean War continues through the 1950s and 1960s, members of the “Mercury 13” become the first American into space, the first American to spacewalk, and even seem likely to be the first to meet President Kennedy’s 1961 commitment of “landing an American on the Moon and returning them safely to the earth” by the end of the decade. 
In 1969, a mission to effect repairs on a KH-9 HEXAGON spy satellite in orbit causes one of the film “buckets” to eject. These are designed to re-enter, and then be retrieved in mid-air by USAF aircraft equipped with a special hook. But a hastily-launched aircraft fails to make it in time, and the bucket lands in the Atlantic Ocean and sinks 15,000 feet to the floor of the Puerto Rico Trench. There is only one vessel in the world capable of retrieving the bucket: the US Navy’s DSV-1 Trieste II. 
This is not the world we know.
The story looks to be more pure alternate history then the last two stories which featured time travel and alien technology respectively. I will let you know how it holds up when I post my review in the near future. In the meantime, you will be able to pick up your copy sometime this month.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. His new short story "Road Trip" can be found in Forbidden Future: A Time Travel Anthology. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Interview: Ian Sales

I now present my interview with the 2012 Sidewise nominated author, Ian Sales, author of "Adrift on the Sea of Rains".

Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

I'm British but I grew up in the Middle East - Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates (both Dubai and Abu Dhabi). After school and university in the UK, I returned to the UAE to work. In 2002, I came back to the UK, where I now work as a database administrator for an ISP.

I've been reading science fiction since I was a kid, and I've been attending conventions and reviewing books since the late 1980s. I had a couple of stories published in UK small press magazines while I was at university, but then decided to try my hand at writing novels. That got me an agent - the John Jarrold Literary Agency - but not a contract with a publisher. In the last few years, I've had short fiction published in several original anthologies and magazines, and in 2012 I edited the anthology Rocket Science for Mutation Press. In 2012, I also founded my own small press, Whippleshield Books, to publish my Apollo Quartet.

What is Whippleshield Books?

Whippleshield Books is a small press which publishes literary hard science fiction or space fiction. When I decided to self-publish my Apollo Quartet, I was determined to do it properly. So I created my own small press, bought some ISBNs, and published the book in signed and numbered limited hardback, paperback, and various ebook formats. Whippleshield Books is open submission, but only for the specific type of fiction described earlier.

What got you interested in space exploration?

I remember being fascinated by it when I was a kid in the 1970s, although the only mission I can actually remember watching on television was ASTP in 1975 (on John Craven's Newsround, for the Brits among you). When I turned 11, I started reading science fiction . . . and pretty much stuck with that for the next thirty years.

It wasn't until I read Moondust by Andrew Smith about six or seven years ago that my interest in space exploration was rekindled. So I started collecting books on the topic, and I set up a blog, A Space About Books About Space, to write about those books. The more I've read about space exploration, the more my interest has deepened.

It's not the science which fascinates me, however, it's the engineering. It's the technical solutions that have been applied to the problem of keeping human beings alive in space, and getting them where they want to go. I also find deep sea exploration fascinating for much the same reason.

Going back to our timeline, what do you think the future of space exploration will be like?

I've yet to be convinced commercial space is the way forward. As they like to say in the space industry, to make a small fortune in space, start with a big fortune. The commercial sector simply doesn't have the long-term view necessary to exploit space and off-Earth resources, and exploration is an important early stage in that process. Shareholders want their dividends, and they won't wait twenty years for cash to start rolling in. Especially when it's all going to be a very expensive gamble anyway.

Of course, some Kuhnian paradigm shift could come along and result in cheap and easy access to space, but I'm not holding my breath. Instead it'll be small steps by public institutions until we have enough of a presence in space to bootstrap it to the next level. And that's not going to happen this century. In fact, I'm doubtful we'll see anyone land on Mars in my lifetime. You'd think we'd be beyond philanthropy as the chief means of financing exploration, but if we're returning to that model for the rest of this century then all we have to look forward to is publicly-funded robots in programmes which will be progressively rolled back as capitalists expropriate more and more of the public purse. Given what we've done to this planet - and continue to do - then we really, really need to look beyond quarterly P&L statements. In so many different ways. And that includes space. I am not hopeful.

What is "Adrift in the Sea of Stars" about?

In a nutshell: a militarised Apollo space programme has led to a base on the Moon at the Apollo 15 landing-site. Meanwhile on Earth, the Cold War turned hot and resulted in an exchange of nuclear missiles which has killed everyone. The astronauts on the Moon, however, have the Bell, a Nazi "wunderwaffe", which allows them to cross into alternate realities, and they're hunting for one in which the Earth was not destroyed by war.

What inspired you to write the story?

2009 was the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landings, and I wanted to celebrate this on my A Space About Books About Space blog. First, I read the biographies of the three astronauts, Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins, and posted reviews. I also wanted to write a piece of fiction about Apollo. In the event, I never finished the story in time.

A few months later, the writing group in which I was a member decided we should all have a go at flash fiction. I went back to my Apollo story and realised that I didn't need to finish it, I just needed to cut down what I'd written to 1000 words. So I did, it became 'The Old Man of the Sea of Dreams', and I posted it on my blog. I'd enjoy the process of researching and writing it, and I wanted to do something similar but more ambitious. I'm not sure if I had the plot or the title of "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" first, but I do know that I wanted to write a literary space fiction novella that was as realistic as I could possibly make it.

What sources were particularly helpful when researching for the novel?

Mostly, I used reference works on the Apollo programme, particularly the ones published by Apogee Books. Other details I picked up from astronaut biographies and autobiographies. "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" has two pages of bibliography - as indeed will all four books of the quartet - and it was important to me that I get everything as accurate as possible, which meant lots and lots and lots of research. I even read a book on the Apollo Guidance Computer so I could reference the correct programs at various points during the story.

How did it feel to win the 2012 BSFA Award in the short fiction category?

It was a huge surprise. When I published "Adrift on the Sea of Rains", I'd sort of expected my friends to buy copies and I thought perhaps a few people who were space nuts might find it interesting. I mean, it had a glossary and two pages of abbreviations! People just didn't do that in science fiction. So when friends and acquaintances started telling me how much they liked it, and positive reviews began to appear online, it slowly dawned on me that I'd written something that people actually thought was good - even though I'd broken every rule in the book, so to speak.

Appearing on the BSFA shortlist wasn't much of a surprise as numerous people had told me they were nominating it. (I'd also been shortlisted the previous year for SF Mistressworks, and people had told me then they were nominating that.) Winning the award, however, was a completely different matter. I fully expected Aliette de Bodard to walk away with the award for her excellent story "Immersion" (it was later shortlisted for the Hugo, Nebula and Sturgeon awards). I was so sure I wouldn't win, in fact, that I didn't bother writing a speech to give in the event I did win. So when they called out my name, it was a few seconds before it sank in. And all I could do when I accepted the award was mumble thanks to everyone who had voted.

Can you give us any hints about the forthcoming Apollo Quartet stories?

The stories in the Apollo Quartet do not form a single story-arc. The links between the novellas are thematic, and there is a motif which develops over the four books. The first three are based on alternate takes on the Apollo programme - the military Moon base in "Adrift on the Sea of Rain"s, a mission to Mars using reconfigured Apollo hardware in "The Eye With Which The Universe Beholds Itself" . . . and a female astronaut corps inspired by the Mercury 13 in book three, "Then Will The Great Ocean Wash Deep Above".

The final book, "All That Outer Space Allows", will be set in the real Apollo programme. It's been important to me while I've been writing the novellas that they're very realistic. Obviously, Falcon Base never existed, nor did the USA send a man to Mars in 1979. But the technology described in "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" is real historical technology - even the Bell has a Wikipedia page. And the Mars mission profile in "The Eye With Which The Universe Beholds Itself" was actually proposed in 1966, although I took a few liberties in redesigning it to use Apollo hardware. The FTL drive, on the other hand, is pure invention, although I did carefully stitch it into existing Area 51 mythology.

Apollo Quartet 3, "Then Will The Great Ocean Wash Deep Above", will be purer alternate history, with a pair of unrelated narratives based on two real events from the 1960s/1970s. It will be very different in terms of story to the first two books of the Apollo Quartet. That's one thing I'm trying to do with each book: deliver something the reader won't expect having read the preceding novella . . .

Do you have any other projects you are working on?

I have a bunch of short stories I'm working on, including one about Yuri Gagarin marooned on Mars, and another about angels. I'm in the middle of plotting out a novel about the first mission to leave the Solar System, which has the working title of "The Voyage That Will Never End". I'm also planning to collect half a dozen of my alternate space short stories (some of which I, er, have yet to write) and publish them using Whippleshield Books. Just this month, I had a story published in The Orphan online magazine about rocket sleds and I have another about aliens on the Moon who attack the Earth which will appear soon in a literary anthology from The Fiction Desk.

What are you reading now?

I'm still working my way through research material for Apollo Quartet 3, such as the autobiography of Jerrie Cobb, the first of the Mercury 13. I also foolishly promised on my blog that I'd spend this summer reading six science fiction classics. While I do read a lot of sf, I have a pretty low opinion of the many of the so-called classics of the genre, so I'm not expecting to enjoy the experience. The first book is Robert Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, and I expect I'll start it before the end of the month . . .

Do you have any advice for would-be authors?

I'm probably the worst person in the world to give advice to would-be authors. I self-published "Adrift on the Sea of Rains" because I didn't want to compromise on my vision. Winning the BSFA Award - and being a finalist for the Sidewise Award - vindicated that decision, but that doesn't mean everyone should do it. I suppose it depends on whether you want to be a financially-successful writer or a critically-successful writer. True, some writers are both, but most are either one or the other. And if your chief objective is filthy lucre/units sold, then not compromising on your vision is about the worst thing you could do. But whichever path you decide to follow, you need to keep plugging away, hone your craft, get your name out there via short stories or guest posts.

Build yourself a platform. It not only helps if you choose to self-publish, but getting yourself noticed is half the battle when it comes to getting published by a major imprint too. And don't forget to read a lot too. And everything you read: read it *critically*. That's very important.

Have you read any of the other works nominated for the Sidewise Awards? If yes, what did you think about them?

Not yet, although I'll certainly read the other short form finalists. Of the long-form finalists, the story of the McDevitt & Resnick one sounds like it might appeal, but I'm not a fan of either author. Ruff's novel appears interesting, and while the premise of the Sansom feels a bit tired (genre fiction has been over that same ground several times) it might be worth a read. The other two look too much like steampunk for me.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Review: "New Frontier" by Cliff Ball

Grade: F

Politics is rarely an ingredient for a good alternate history.  While most authors will attempt to lessen the impact of their own political beliefs on the story, those who do not will often find that their story suffers for it.  New Frontier by Cliff Ball is no exception.

The POD for this world is Robert Kennedy being convicted of murdering Marilyn Monroe.  Afterwards, John Kennedy's two terms, Barry Goldwater's two terms and several prominent Democrat politicians either killed off or transformed into stereotypical liberals.  Jimmy Carter is made to look like the enemy of the space program (while even NASA admits he was the least supportive president, he did contribute the message sent with the Voyager probe and was a proponent of planetary exploration) allowing Ronald Reagan to be elected President in 1976.  Reagan goes on to declare that America will establish a colony on the Moon and Mars.   The Soviets try to one-up him by building a nuclear-powered interstellar starship with a computer using technology stolen from a young Bill Gates (the reference to the blue screen of death was amusing) that can apparently break the light barrier. 

This is where things start to become implausible.  While a better-funded space program might have accomplished some of the goals that Ball described in his novel, the idea that the Soviets (whose space program was insane to begin with and did not always have the reputation for their engineering ability) could  build a starship that could reach FTL speedy simply by going faster then light takes a concept that is already controversial in scientific circles and makes it seem implausible to the extreme.

Though the cover and description seem to suggest that the story will focus on the alternate space program, Ball spends an inordinate amount of time Earthside.  Iran still has the hostage crisis in 1979, but Reagan handles it differently then Carter and is more successful.  In this ATL, however, Osama bin Laden is working with Ayatollah Khomeini who even calls Osama his "apprentice", which makes him sound less like the religious and political leader of Iran and more like a Sith Lord.  Nevertheless, this pairing is very implausible.  The issues between Sunnis and Shias are well documented and Osama is on record as saying that Shia Muslims are one of the four principal "enemies of Islam" along with "heretics, [...] America, and Israel".  Worse yet is America's reaction to Osama's revenge on America, which includes the mass expulsion of American citizens due to their religion, an action very out of character with America society.

The writing was poor, with too much tell and not enough show.  Plot and character development was minimal, in truth the story was just a retelling of the events stemming from the original POD.  What really hurt this book, however, was the author's political bias.  Though S. M. Stirling would lecture me that only an idiot would take a character's viewpoint as the voice of the author, too often I felt I was being preached at instead of being told a story.  While the next volume in this series might be a better, I cannot recommend New Frontier.

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Mitro is founder, editor and contributor of Alternate History Weekly Update. When he is not busy writing about his passion for alternate history, he spends his time working as a licensed attorney in the state of Illinois and dreams of being a published author himself one day.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Alternate Space Race

One of our contributors, Korsgaard, shared a new blog with me called the Alternate History of the Space Race.  Written by David S. F. Portree, this blog imagines space missions that never were.  After reading it I started thinking about the Space Race from an alternate history perspective and how alternate historians have approached this competition for space between the United States and the Soviet Union.

To a nerd like me, there is something really exciting about the Space Race.  A program built off the remains of an evil empire that allowed adventurous explorers to strap themselves to an explosive pile of lowest bids for a potentially one-way ticket to the unknown.  All of this set during the back-drop of the Cold War, where two nations focused on attaining firsts in space exploration, which were seen as necessary for national security and symbolic of technological and ideological superiority.  Did the astronauts/cosmonauts in orbit ever fear that when they looked outside their windows they would see the cities of man blossom into nuclear flame?  What would happen to those in space when the world went mad?

Thankfully that never happened. The Soviet Union collapsed, but their existence and competition with the United States over space helped spark an unprecedented increase in spending on education and pure research, which accelerated scientific advancements that led to beneficial spin-off technologies. Counting all of that and a man landing on the moon (which some people still refuse to believe), is it possible that we could have done more?  Where are our cities in space?  Where are the colonies on Mars?  Where are the interstellar ships leaving to colonizing Earth-like worlds?  Where the hell is my jetpack?  Perhaps that is one of the reasons why so many people confuse 2001: A Space Odyssey as alternate history.  It represents that lost opportunity to accomplish something greater.

That is where alternate historians come in.  We are the men and women who can look back at history and see the divergence points necessary to make our science fiction dreams a reality.  Now we have all heard of some of the more the more well-known alternate histories of the Space Race, like Warren Ellis' Ministry of Space or Stephen Baxter's Voyager, but there are other alternate histories out there that cover an alternate Space Race.  An excellent short story I read last year during my honeymoon was Paul J. McAuley's Sidewise-nominated short story, A Very British HistoryThe story is actually a review of a fictional history book titled A Brief History of the Colonization of Space (Oxford 2001), which describes what happens after the British got to Peenemunde before the Russians or Americans.  You can find the full text of the story here.

If you are looking for some original, online alternate history you should check out David Atwell's Human Timeline, an epic alternate history, with references to various sci-fi franchises, that once again features Britain getting a piece of the Peenemunde pie.  The point of divergence leads to a mutli-sided Space Race and takes the reader far into the future as humanity advances and interacts with other intelligent species.  I first read it back when I was a teenager and you can still find the entire series on Changing the Times.

That is why I am looking forward to reading and reviewing indie author Cliff Ball's new novel, New Frontier.  Here is a description of the novel:

In this speculative fiction novel, what-if Ronald Reagan became President in 1976 instead and the Space Race turned out differently? He continues with the moon landings, and declares that a moon base would be established by 1979, followed by a Mars Base by 1989. The Soviets decide to up the ante by building an interstellar starship, and send it on its way as the US establishes a permanent presence on the Moon. The US builds a space station, followed by a base on Mars, that will eventually be turned into a colony.
The rest of Earth follows the original timeline, so terrorism rears its ugly head, which will forever change American politics. Iran and its attempt at taking hostages is taken care of in 1979, but a new threat emerges because of it. The new POTUS has to pursue these enemies of the US to secure America's future. We follow America's progress from Moon to Mars, along with the Teacher in Space Program, to an eventual starship mission out of the solar system, which will continue in book two.
Even though the Space Race may be over and the Space Shuttles retired, do not lose hope about getting your very own asteroid retirement home.  Here are some upcoming events to look forward to by the end of the decade: