FACTS! On the surface, yes it would be another easy sell, but yeah, not right now thanks.
Posts by Zach Anderson
YES PLEASE!!! All three of those would be fun. Peshawar Lancers would be so rich visually. But I think Worldwar would be an easy sell for adaptation. Any sort of ISOT I feel like is a harder sell, but regular TV scifi has plenty of crazy scenarios so I’m sure it’s doable.
Yeah, definitely middling. I still enjoy it for what it is - especially since we don’t have a lot AH tv media. Some bits are definitely silly. But other pieces have been fun.
But dear god, how is Ed still alive!? 🤣
That’s an interesting take…when I read it the wording made him seem more like a guy disillusioned with the system generally and didn’t care for either party’s leaders? But yeah he also didn’t expressly *dislike* said three-termer either.
Oh I’d love that! A “Children of Nantucket” series that shows us the next generation fully in the saddle, or even the generation after that. Though it would be my guess that the Bronze Age collapse doesn’t happen in that world.
This makes me think of Reds! on AH . com
Oh this would be an awesome collab! Though tbh the Nantucket side of that series is my preference.
The Drake Presidency (1881–87) pushed the idea of small government hard: cutting federal power, privatizing services, and fast-tracking western statehood. The result? Labor unrest, strikes, health crises, and political backlash. The stage was set for a Federalist comeback. #alternatehistory
Currently re-reading Turtledove’s TL-191 series, so I’ve got quite the plethora of options 🤣
NGL, as a former Okie, this shocked me a bit.
Also, it looks like he’s planning on….rotating….the Lincoln Memorial?
This makes such good sense. Being from OK but now living in OR, and having friends here that are from deep in the Midwest, we always have this argument of where Oklahoma fits - I grew up near OKC which is RIGHT ON THE LINE and I never felt like “Southern” fit, but Midwest doesn’t fit well either 🤣
DINOTOPIA!!! Man that’s a fun throwback. Those books were wonderful.
Presence was the first TD novel I read, and it retains a special place in my heart.
Steele was a fun piece too, and I just read Powerless a few weeks ago and loved the way it went.
Practicing with Inkscape: Classroom-style poster showing the expansion of the USA in Washington Burns. Special thanks to @ynot1989.bsky.social for the basemap. #alternatehistory #alternatehistorymap
Washington Burns 1874 election map & wiki box, with Horace Littlefield (F, NY) beating out Austin Campbell (D, PT), and Preston McCleary (R, FL). #alternatehistory #alternatehistorymap
Littlefield's election in '74 marked the end of the post-war era. The first Federalist POTUS since the 1830s, he was known as the "traveling president," touring the USA by rail for the centennial, and going to Canada in 1880. His VP was also the first black man to hold that office #alternatehistory
Washington Burns 1868 election map & wiki box, with John P. Quincy (D, MO) beating out Victor Roland (F, CT), and Orville Kent (R, JE). #alternatehistory #alternatehistorymap
After the scandals of the John P. Quincy, Bradley Kinder's short time in office was what the country needed it to be: forgettable. He oversaw the admission of a new Western state, continued to encourage westward settlement, and quickly bowed out of the 1874 race before it started. #alternatehistory
John P. Quincy entered Washington House in 1869 with high hopes, viewed as a continuation of the successful Brandt Presidency. The early days were good, with the end of Reconstruction and the completion of the transcontinental railroad. But by the end: scandal & disgrace. #AlternateHistory
As always, Sean nailed this map for the WB project. Was great to bring the city of Franklin, which is at the heart of the Washington Burns world, to life. #alternatehistory #maps
In 1863, Hugo Brandt became the first president under the new Constitution. He worked to reunite the country, expanded civil rights, opened the West to homesteaders, established Lakota Territory, pushed railroads—and named Abraham Lincoln to the Supreme Court. #AlternateHistory
Washington Burns 1862 election map & wiki box, with Hugo Brandt (D, OH) beating out Ulysses Portman (F, ME), and Peter Doyle (R, VA). #alternatehistory #alternatehistorymap
It's 1862, and the USA prepares for its first post-war election, with Brandt running for a full official term. The new constitution is fully implemented, Oregon joins the Union, and the country grapples with how much punishment is appropriate for the South. #alternatehistory
While the delegates worked on a new post-war constitution, the rest of the country began the long process of rebuilding, with Acting President Brandt and his cabinet proposing bold new reforms for reconstruction. #alternatehistory
"We, the People of the United States, in the firm pursuit of liberty, justice, and equality for all men, do...establish this Constitution to secure the Union, provide for the equal protection of the laws, and ensure the blessings of freedom and self-government for...our posterity" #alternatehistory
At the 1861 gathering in Philadelphia, 484 delegates from 25 states debated the future of the republic and how it would be structured. On May 15th, the convention adopted the new constitution and sent it out for ratification, with a slew of new reforms. #alternatehistory
This amazing map shows the political divisions of the United States by the end of the War Between the States - a much messier situation than our OTL Civil War. #alternatehistory
From October 17th, 1860, up through the election and inauguration of the next President in 1863, America was in flux, a period that historians from this alternate refer to as "The Interregnum." Central to this period would be the demand for constitutional overhaul. #alternatehistory
1860 - The Slaver Union falls, and the War Between the States ends. The real question remains: what will the peace ultimately look like? #alternatehistory