Making History (novel)

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Making History (1997) is the third novel by Stephen Fry. The plot involves the creation of an alternate history where Hitler never existed. The book won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

[edit] In the beginning...

The story is told in first person by Michael "Puppy" Young, a young history student at Cambridge University on the verge of completing his doctoral thesis on the early life of Adolf Hitler and his mother. He meets Professor Leo Zuckerman, a physicist who has a strong personal interest in Hitler, the rise of Nazism and the Holocaust. Michael assumes this is due to his Jewish heritage. However, it is later revealed that Leo was born Axel Bauer, the son of Dietrich Bauer, a Nazi doctor at Auschwitz. Leo has developed a machine that enables the past to be viewed—but it is of no practical use as the image is not resolvable into details. Together, they hatch a plan to modify the machine such that it can be used to send something back into time. They decide to use a permanent male contraceptive pill, stolen from Michael's girlfriend (a biochemistry researcher), who, due to his continual distraction, has left him to take a position at Princeton University. They send this pill back in time to the well in Braunau am Inn so that Hitler's father will drink it, be made infertile, and Hitler will never be born. Michael sends the pill back and everything changes.

[edit] Alternate World War II

When Michael awakens he is completely disoriented. He soon discovers that he is in the USA, at Princeton University. Everyone he encounters is surprised that he is speaking in an English accent. It takes some time for Michael's memory to return. He realises that his plan was successful, history has changed and for some reason his parents must have moved to America. Initially he is elated and tells his new friend Steve how happy he is because Steve has never heard of Hitler, Braunau-am-Inn or the Nazi party. Steve corrects Michael and reveals that he is well aware of the Nazi party.

Michael begins to discover the history of this new world. It turns out that without Hitler a new leader emerged, Rudolph Gloder, who was just as ruthless as Hitler. It turns out that Michael has replaced Hitler with a Nazi leader who turned out to be more efficient, charming, patient, reasonable, and as equally committed to the Final Solution as Hitler.

In this alternate history, the Nazis won a mandate in the Reichstag in 1932 and developed an electronics industry of their own. Unlike Hitler, Gloder proceeded with stealth, ensuring peaceful unification with Austria in 1937. More alarmingly, though, Gloder's Nazis also had a head start on research and development of nuclear weapons, which led to the destruction of Moscow, Leningrad, Stalin and his Politburo in this alternate 1938. The Greater German Reich annexes Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Poland, Turkey and invades the remnants of the former Soviet Union. In 1939, France, Britain, Scandinavia and the Benelux nations capitulate, although Britain rebels in 1941, leading to the execution of the Duke of York (our George VI) and other dissidents. Jews are exiled to a "Jewish Free State" within the former Yugoslavia, where most of this world's Holocaust occurs. The United States develops nuclear weapons in 1941, leading to a Cold War between Nazi Germany, its satellites, and the United States. The latter has never gone to war against the Japanese Empire in the Pacific, and it is left unsaid whether Japan has its own nuclear weapons as well.

Due to these changes, various inefficient errors caused by Hitler's personality faults never occurred. The Nazis won the war, and are now the ruling party in the whole of Europe. The Third Reich's plan for genocide of the Jewish race came to fruition, although this is only implied, never explicitly stated (every time Michael attempts to ask someone what happened to Europe's Jews, no-one answers him). The USA is engaged in a cold war against the Nazis, supporting former Soviet guerrillas fighting in Siberia.

As a result, this United States is far more socially conservative. Because there was no sixties upsurge of social liberalism and decriminalisation of homosexuality in (Nazi-occupied) Western Europe in this world, it is still a crime, while racial segregation is still active. Steve turns out to be gay, and when he discovers Michael's background, he marvels at his talk of gay pride marches, urban gay communities and a mass social movement in Michael's world of origin, regarding it as "utopian." Much to his surprise, Michael reciprocates Steve's feelings, and realises that he too is gay.

Michael is apprehended by the authorities, who believe that he is a possible spy. Michael learns that the water from the well in Braunau was used to create "Braunau Water," which was used to sterilise the European Jews, wiping them out in a generation. In a cruel twist of fate, the person who perfected the synthesis was Dietrich Bauer. Once more his physicist son, Axel, is racked with guilt and has developed a Temporal Imager. With Michael and Steve's help, they plan to send a dead rat to the well such that it will be pumped clean of the sterilising water. As they attempt to do this, they are interrupted by the federal agents that apprehended Michael earlier and they end up shooting Steve, who dies in Michael's arms as the time process occurs.

[edit] Back to normal?

Time changes again. Expecting the change, Michael comes to his senses faster this time and discovers that almost everything is back to how it was, except that his favorite band never existed. He gives up his career in academia, figuring he can at least make some money "writing" the songs that he remembers from the previous reality. Finally, Michael is reunited with Steve, who also remembers the previous reality. Their gay relationship is no longer criminal.

[edit] Writing Techniques

While most of the book is written in standard prose, a couple of chapters are written in the format of a screenplay. The chapters with this style of writing tend to be action-heavy and allow a lot of information to be shared in a relatively short space of time.

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