War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches

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War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches is a 1996 Bantam science fiction anthology, edited by Kevin J. Anderson. It is a tribute to H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds; each story envisions a famous individual's reactions to the Martian invasion and the impact of the invasion on a different part of the world.

Several of the stories tie into other works of fiction; Anderson would also later go on to write The Martian War, a novel that also presented Wells' Martian invasion from the viewpoints of Wells and several other fictional and historical characters.

[edit] Table of contents

Title Persona Author Notes City, country or region invaded in the story Alternate history development after end of Martian invasion
Forward H. G. Wells Kevin J. Anderson - -
The Roosevelt Dispatches Teddy Roosevelt Mike Resnick Also included in The Other Teddy Roosevelts; in this story, Martians are powerful and nearly invulnerable in their own bodies, even without a Fighting Machine Cuba (only minor Martian presence)
Canals in the Sand Percival Lowell Kevin J. Anderson Was expanded to serve as the prologue of The Martian War North Africa
Foreign Devils Empress Dowager Cixi Walter Jon Williams Won the 1996 Sidewise Award for Alternate History (Short Form) ; conflict in story is as much between various Chinese political and military factions as Humans vs. Martians China China uses disarray of European powers to shake off colonial tutlelage and become world power 50 years ahead of schedule, remains a monarchy; no Chinese Republic
Blue Period Pablo Picasso Daniel Marcus - Paris, France The young Picasso paints Martians, his later artistic style substantially influenced
The Martian Invasion Journals of Henry James Henry James Robert Silverberg - England (same invasion as in original Wells book, from a different viewpoint) Henry James becomes author of "The War of the Worlds", later style and literary career substantially effected
The True Tale of the Final Battle of Umslopogaas the Zulu Winston Churchill and H. Rider Haggard Janet Berliner Umslopogaas was the fictional companion of Allan Quatermain in Haggard's novels South Africa during the Boer War (only minor Martian presence)
Night of the Cooters The Texas Rangers Howard Waldrop Originally printed in Omni in 1987 Texas
Determinism and the Martian War, with Relativistic Corrections Albert Einstein Doug Beason - Italy
Soldier of the Queen Rudyard Kipling and Gandhi Barbara Hambly - India Gandhi makes India independent 50 years ahead of schedule
Mars: The Home Front Edgar Rice Burroughs George Alec Effinger John Carter helps the Barsoomians fight Wells' Martians, who in this depiction are only one of many races on Mars[1] Barsoomian city of Helium (a raid only)
A Letter from St. Louis Joseph Pulitzer Allen Steele - St. Louis (reference to the destruction of New York) Pulitzer killed by Martians before having had a chance to endow the Pulitzer Prize
Resurrection Leo Tolstoy and Stalin Mark W. Tiedemann - Russia After reconstruction from Martian ravages, in which Tolstoy has key role, Russia becomes a stable Constitutional Monarchy; no October Revolution, Stalin an obscure revolutionary
Paris Conquers All Jules Verne Gregory Benford and David Brin In this story, Martians are divided into males and females, directly contradicting data in original Wells book but vital for plotline here Paris, France (substantially different from Daniel Marcus' account for the same city)
To Mars and Providence H. P. Lovecraft Don Webb Equates the Martians with Lovecraft's Elder Things[2] Providence, Rhode Island (references landings in London, Paris, St. Louis, and Texas)
Roughing it During the Martian Invasion Mark Twain Daniel Keys Moran and Jodi Moran - New Orleans (brief depiction of a naval battle off New York)
To See the World End Joseph Conrad M. Shayne Bell - "Congo Free State"
After a Lean Winter Jack London Dave Wolverton The only story to give a brief glimpse of the Martians' own point of view (in this story, they are telepathic and can, if they want, communicate with humans) and it shows that they, too, think of themselves as The Good Guys Alaska
The Soul Selects her own Society: Invasion and Repulsion: A Chronological Reinterpretation of Two of Emily Dickinson's Poems: A Wellsian Perspective Emily Dickinson Connie Willis This essay, purporting to find hints of a Martian invasion in Dickinson's poetry, seems mainly a satire on over-elaborate literary criticism; won the 1997 Hugo Award for Best Short Story Amherst, Massachusetts
Afterward: Retrospective Jules Verne Gregory Benford and David Brin Set in 1928, and recounts how the technology and lessons learned from the Martians have changed the world for the better, and how the humans are launching a counter-invasion of Mars[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ This premise was also used in Rainbow Mars and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II. Also, in this story, Dejah Thoris is abducted by minions of Wells's Martians; Jess Nevins's League annotations suggest that author Alan Moore referenced this with Dejah's implied 'troubling occurrence' and absence.
  2. ^ In Lovecraft's work and mentioned in this story, the Elder Things/Martians arrived on Earth millions of years ago and built a city in Antarctica before being wiped out. In the back cover of Global Dispatches, several tripods are shown to be apparently excavating something in a frozen landscape. This could be a reference to the Martians searching for their long-lost brethren.
  3. ^ The world described, and the benefits gained from Martian technology, is similar to the world depicted in Scarlet Traces


[edit] External Links