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A Date Which Will Live Infamy?: An Anthology of Pearl Harbors Stories That Might Have Been
 
 
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A Date Which Will Live Infamy?: An Anthology of Pearl Harbors Stories That Might Have Been [Paperback]

Martin Harry Greenberg (Editor), Brian M Thomsen (Editor)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 19, 2001
"December 7, 1941, a date which will live in infamy." So did President Franklin Delano Roosevelt address the American people about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that initiated America's entry into World War II.

But what if things had happened differently?

A Date Which Will Live in Infamy is an anthology of fictional alternatives to the events that led up to, occurred during, and followed directly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The authors and their original stories that appear here for the first time are:

"The Sumter Scenario: A Time Wars Story" by Simon Hawke • "The Secret History of Mr. Churchill's Revenge" by Tony Geraghty • "Cain" by Jim DeFelice • "Pariah" by Ed Gorman • "Green Zeroes" by R. J. Pineiro • "The East Wind Caper" by James Reasoner • "Path of the Storm" by William C. Dietz • "The Fourth Scenario" by William Hallahan • "Victory at Pearl Harbor" by Brendan DuBois • "I Relieve You, Sir" by Barrett Tillman • "Beer, Betrayal, and Ho Chi Minh" by Doug Allyn • "A Terrible Resolve" by William H. Keith, Jr. • "December 7th, 2001" - A Classroom on the American Continent" by Allen C. Kupfer


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Brian M. Thomsen has been nominated for a Hugo Award, has served as a World Fantasy Award judge, and is the author of two novels, Once Around the Realms and The Mage in the Iron Mask. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife, Donna, and two talented cats named Sparky and Minx. Martin H. Greenberg often called the king of anthologists, has compiled more than one thousand anthologies, including the Murder Most...series and the American Ghosts Series. The president of TEKNO books, he lives in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Cumberland House Publishing (October 19, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1581822227
  • ISBN-13: 978-1581822229
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,569,828 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pearl Harbor Redux, November 24, 2001
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This review is from: A Date Which Will Live Infamy?: An Anthology of Pearl Harbors Stories That Might Have Been (Paperback)
An anthology of allohistories, that is, "what-if" stories based on the attack on Pearl Harbor. Like all anthologies, some stories are superb, some are weak, but overall the level is quite high. The only flaw, and it isn't a serious one, lies at the hands of the editors in their selection and organization of the stories. I'll leave the weakest part of the collection, Part 1, for last.
Part 2, 'Alternate Actions', are the stories by Pineiro, Reasoner, Dietz, and Hallanhan. These are the most traditionally "what-if" stories, hinging on a minor event causing a major change in result. Three are very good, and one, Reasoner's 'The East Wind Caper' is outstanding. A hard-boiled private eye (see Bogart in the role) stumbles onto the Japanese plot and saves the day. Well told, tightly paced and humorous.
Part 3, 'Alternate Aftermaths', contains stories by DuBois, Tillman, Allyn, and Keith. Of these, Keith's 'A Terrible Resolve' is the best, a tale of Japanese victories which lead the Empire up to the beaches of California before the success of the Manhatten Project and the actions of American kamikazi bombers, turn the Imperial Navy back.
A Postscript by Kupfer, which posits a Nazi victory over both America and Japan, is the most chilling story in the book.
The Appendices give an excellent historical background of the real world event, of the military and diplomatic realities which the allohistorians in the anthology had to manipulate for our entertainment.
Now, the worst for last, and as I previously said, it isn't too bad. Part 1, 'Alternate Architects', has the four stories by Hawke, Geraghty, DeFelice, Gorman. Very little allohistorical content in any of these, and what little there is, is only background color. Mostly these four just rehash old conspiracy theories about Roosevelt and/or Churchill knowing that the attack was going to happen and allowed it to go on in the hopes American would enter the war against Germany. I've got no problem with this belief, though I think, like most conspiracies, the proponents are assuming malice where simple incompetence is enough of an explanation. My problem with these stories is that so much of the tale is given over to rehashing the arguements, lecturing the reader on why the plot really did happen, that the stories are just plain boring. The editors could have had a much stronger anthology by leaving this part out and putting more of the rest in.
One observation, something that gave me a small grin. When reading the stories, watch for similarities between them. Variations on the phrase "cigarette, cigar, and pipe smoke" pops up in an awful lot of stories. I suspect the editors handed our a very detailed background guide to the authors, and some of them lifted material out of it verbatim.
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21 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Needed Book For This Time, January 6, 2002
This review is from: A Date Which Will Live Infamy?: An Anthology of Pearl Harbors Stories That Might Have Been (Paperback)
This is one of the very best collections of alternate world histories that I have read and one I would use in the classroom were I still teaching. However, the stories as good as they are take second place to two very thoughtful essays by experts at the end of the book. Paul Thomsen gives an excellent diplomatic perspective of what went right and what went wrong in events leading to the attack. The greatest praise must go to historian William Forstchen who sums up the "The Realities of an Alternate Pearl Harbor". He brings out things that most of us either did not know or did not fully understand. It is his premise that even in the worst case scenarios all going against us, a third wave of attack destroying the oil tanks stored at Pearl which would keep us out of the Pacific for a year, the sinking of the three carriers that were away at the time of the attack which would mean no victories at Midway or the Coral Sea, the taking over of the base with veteran Japanese soldiers which would lose us Hawaii, and even the bombing of the Panama Canel which would take a year to rebuild, we would still have prevailed. Maybe the war would have been a year or two longer, but American moral resolve and production would have won out in the end. We were heavily devalued by most of the Japanese command and they would not foresee that in the American gestalt there is a sense of morality that makes us fight for what we see as not just territorial goals, but for freedom. In doing so we believe in complete victory. If anything, the Japanese would have been worse off to have gone beyond their success at Pearl. A year longer to get started would have meant more production of weapons on our part and by 1946 we would have had more than three atomic bombs. We likely would have laid waste to Japan to pay back for the conquest of Hawaii, the bombing of Panama, and raids on California. As it was, the Japanese were surprised at the resolve we did show. They thought we would be forced to compromise and negotiate a peace. They were as surpised as Muslim fanatics must be today in seeing our reaction to the attack on the Twin Towers in New York and the Pentagon in Washington D.C. and related actions. We prevailed then, we will now.
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9 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too defeatist in my opinion, July 28, 2002
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This review is from: A Date Which Will Live Infamy?: An Anthology of Pearl Harbors Stories That Might Have Been (Paperback)
After reading through this collection of "What-If?" stories, I can tell that I will not be holding on to this too much. Although the stories themselves are pretty good for the pulp novel status. Overall, a majority of the stories in this book are too defeatist in nature. The actual event though horrible and a loss for the US probably would not of lead to some of the time-lines that some of these authors pose. A number of them list the West Coast of the US being over run or captured. Finally, as others have stated the appendices listed are the good parts of this book. They explain the realities behind the attack, a time line of the attack, and finally an explanation of possible alternitives and the chances of them affecting the outcome of the attack. Possible better alternative histories of the attack on Pearl Harbor could be found in the book "Rising Sun Victorious" or in the books "What-IF and What-If 2"
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
While putting this volume together I had a discussion with my brother the historian. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Pearl Harbor, United States, Pacific Fleet, West Coast, New York, Sargent Bay, Admiral Yamamoto, Boom Boom, Chief Tweed, Ford Island, Soviet Union, Admiral Kimmel, Frank Stover, Admiral Nagumo, Commander Rochefort, Isoroku Yamamoto, Japanese Empire, Prime Minister Konoye, San Francisco, Wake Island, First Division, French Indochina, Hawaiian Islands, Hickam Field, Hong Kong
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