Pages: 416 (Hardcover) ISBN: 0333751833 Pub: Macmillan Pub date: 2000-04-07 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 842813
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Editorial Review:American editor Robert Cowley has brought together those whom his meaty book dubs "the world's foremost military historians" to describe details of significant human conflicts and to construct plausible "counterfactual" events. The balance between the actual and the speculative varies between essays but the counterfactual is always used as "a tool to enhance the understanding of history". Beginning with the siege of Jerusalem in 701 BC and ending with the Cold War, the contributors posit some amazing historical alternatives. Christianity and Islam, for example, may never have existed and Hitler might have been killed in the First World War. Generally taking a "Western" (sometimes specifically American) perspective, the far-reaching repercussions of real and imagined events are shown. Information gems include the fact that Genghis Khan's soldiers wore silk underwear and that the Kaiser almost met his end in a Wild West show stunt in 1889. What If? reveals that the path of history is a mix of action, reaction and chance. As the editor writes, "milliseconds can influence centuries" and "the difference can be as slight as the path of a bullet". A book of both facts and opinions, it can be argued with as well as learnt from. It might provide perfect fodder for an intellectual dinner party--although pondering the frightening unpredictability of past and future could damage your appetite! --Karen Tiley Reader Reviews:Fascinating and thought provoking (0/0 people found this helpful)Most fans of history have often asked themselves "What if" certain historical events had turned out differently. What is [...] attack on the Soviet Union had succeeded? What if the British had beaten George Washington? All of these questions are given a very detailed analysis by professional historians, who manage to blend historical rigour with entertaining prose. Some of the what ifs raised are truly astounding, such as the notion that the sole reason the Ottoman Empire never conquered Europe was simply because of heavy rain during a major battle.
fantastic fun (2/2 people found this helpful)well, i just think this is a superbly interesting book, perfect for dipping in to and re-visiting. If more people were to read this sort of book on trains etc. it would represent a considerable intellectual advance over puzzles and glossly magazines. its NOT a university text book, and to criticise it from that point of view is to mis-understand the aim of the book.
Entertaining (4/4 people found this helpful)As a history student myself and with an interest in alternative histories and what might have been, I found this book to be very entertaining. The book covers scenarios such as Thirteen ways the Americans could have lots the revolution, a Roman Victory over the Germanic tribes in the Teutoburg Forest, a victorious Spanish armada, a failed D-Day, and the cold war turning hot at the Berlin Wall in 1961 to name but a few. In each scenario events are pin pointed in which history could have diverted off into an alternative path. It is thoroughly entertaining to read, although I couldn't help but feel slightly disappointed that the alternatives weren't explored in a bit more detail. Nevertheless, the book is an interesting and entertaining read to anyone with an interest in history. Not history but entertainment. (2/4 people found this helpful)I read this book expecting a work of well researched history and read it alongside Creasey's Decisive Battles. I was disappointed. It wasn't the historical clangers that cropped up on the periphery of the scenarios. They were quite entertaining in their own way. It wasn't the description of the pivotal points of history. They were clearly and engagingly explained. What disappointed was the clearly partisan perspective of some of the contributors. Although I expect historians to have an ideological basis for their analyses, it is unacceptable to allow their bias to colour their descriptions. Saying that Lenin brought "political pestilence" to Russia, or writing about "rogue ideologies" in the modern world belongs echoes the school books of Franco's Spain or Hitler's Germany; there is no place for this in history books in a modern democracy. An enteraining read, but a poor work of history. Disappointing (4/4 people found this helpful)What if? What if the authors had spent more time in developing alternative scenarios rather than in presenting the historical background? The idea behind the book is great, but the final product is below average. It is stimulating for the imagination only in the sense that you can imagine how much better you could have written alternative history scenarios! Similar ProductsMore What If?: Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been? What If? America: Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been Roads Not Taken: Tales of Alternate History What If?-Two: More Alternative Historical Time Lines What Might Have Been: Imaginary History from Twelve Leading Historians CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Other Historical Subjects -> Theory & Methods
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Military History -> Strategy, Tactics & Military Science Books -> Subjects -> History -> General Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Hardcover
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