The Two Georges

The Two Georges
First edition (UK)
Author Harry Turtledove and Richard Dreyfuss
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Alternate History
Publisher Hodder & Stoughton (UK)
Tor Books (US)
Publication date
1995 (UK)
March 1996 (US)
Media type Print Paperback
Pages 608
ISBN 0-340-62825-1

The Two Georges is an alternate history novel co-written by science fiction author Harry Turtledove and Oscar-winning actor Richard Dreyfuss. It was originally published in 1995 by Hodder & Stoughton in the United Kingdom, and in 1996 by Tor Books in the United States, and was nominated for the 1995 Sidewise Award for Alternate History.[1]

Plot

The flag used in the world of "The Two Georges" is like the U.S. "Grand Union Flag". In the world of The Two Georges, it was retained permanently as the "Jack and Stripes", flag of the North American Union inside the British Empire
Map of the world in The Two Georges. The British Empire, its protectorates and dominions are denoted in red; pink is the territory of the Franco-Spanish "Holy Alliance"; orange is Portuguese territory; purple is the Austrian Empire; green is Sweden; light blue is the Danish Empire and dark blue is the Russian Empire. Ownership and political organization of grey areas is unclear.

For more than two centuries, what would have become the United States and Canada has been the North American Union, a self-governing dominion encompassing the northern portion of the continent except Alaska, retained under the rule of Russia. The Two Georges, a Gainsborough painting, commemorates the agreement between George Washington and King George III that created this part of the British Empire. The painting itself has become a symbol of national unity.

While being displayed in the city of New Liverpool (formerly Los Angeles), the painting is stolen while a crowd is distracted by the murder of "Honest" Dick (a.k.a. "Tricky" Dick), the Steamer King, a nationally-known used car salesman. Colonel Thomas Bushell of the Royal American Mounted Police leads the search for the painting, accompanied by its former curator Dr. Kathleen Flannery and Captain Samuel Stanley. Some days later, a ransom note is received from the Sons of Liberty, a terrorist organization that wants to see America become independent from the British Empire.

The Governor-General of the North American Union, Sir Martin Luther King, informs Bushell in confidence that the painting must be recovered before King-Emperor Charles III's state visit, or the government will have to pay the Sons' ransom demand of fifty million pounds.

The search takes Bushell, Flannery, and Stanley across the country via airship (an advanced form of dirigible), train, and steamer. They also meet many members of the Sons of Liberty, including Boston newspaper editor John F. Kennedy.

After chasing many false leads and the wrong suspects, Bushell and his associates arrive at Victoria (the nation's capital, on the south side of the Potomac River across from Georgestown, Maryland), and find The Two Georges an hour before the King arrives. They also uncover the true culprits: the Holy Alliance, a union of France and Spain controlling most of Latin America and Northern Africa, and Bushell's superior officer and covert fanatic Sons of Liberty sympathizer, Lieutenant General Horace Bragg. Bushnell then thwarts Bragg's attempts to assassinate the King, first by gunfire then by a bomb concealed in the frame of The Two Georges. Bragg is arrested to await trial, while Bushell and Stanley are both knighted by King Charles for their accomplishments.

Provinces of the North American Union

The North American Union is made up of several provinces according to the map in the book.

Province name OTL Equivalents Notes
AlbertusAlberta and west-central MontanaNamed after Prince Albert
BaffinNorth West Territories (minus the southeastern section) and northwestern Nunavut as well as the Victoria and King William Islands
BanksiaYukon
CanadaOntario
Cherokee NationNorthern Mississippi, northwestern Alabama, a northeastern part of Louisiana, and part of southeastern ArkansasNamed after the Cherokee tribe.
ConnecticutConnecticut
CranmerTexas (minus the eastern section) and Oklahoma (minus the southeastern section)Named after Thomas Cranmer.
DelawareDelaware
DisraeliSoutheastern Idaho, eastern Nevada, all of Utah, and western ColoradoNamed after Benjamin Disraeli.
FloridaFlorida, possibly the Bahamas, the portions of Alabama and Mississippi bordering the Gulf of Mexico, and the Florida Parishes of LouisianaThe status of the Bahamas is unspecified, as the map is a little vague on this point.
FranklinKentuckyNamed after Benjamin Franklin.
GeorgiaGeorgia and most of Alabama
Hanovereastern Montana, southwestern South Dakota, all of Wyoming, and eastern Colorado and Nebraska north of the Platte RiverNamed after the Kingdom of Hanover, which was in personal union with the United Kingdom until 1837.
HudsoniaNunavut (minus the northwestern section and the Victoria and King William Islands) and the southeastern section of the Northwest TerritoriesNamed after nearby Hudson Bay
IllinoisIllinois
LouisianaLouisiana (minus the Florida Parishes and the northeastern part), central Mississippi, eastern Texas, southeastern Oklahoma, and southwestern Arkansas
Lower CaliforniaBaja California Peninsula
MarylandMaryland
MassachusettsMassachusetts and Maine
MiamiOhioNamed after the Miami tribe
MississippiIowa, western Minnesota west of the Mississippi River, southeastern North Dakota, South Dakota east of the Missouri River, and Missouri north of the Missouri River
MissouriMissouri south of the Missouri River, northern Arkansas, all of Kansas, and Nebraska south of the Platte River
New BrunswickNew Brunswick
NewfoundlandNewfoundland and Labrador
New GuernseyWisconsin, Minnesota east of the Mississippi River, and the Upper Peninsula of MichiganNamed after Guernsey Island in the English Channel
New HampshireNew Hampshire
New JerseyNew Jersey
New ScotlandNova Scotia and possibly Prince Edward IslandNew Scotland is a literal translation of the Latin name. Status of Prince Edward Island is unspecified, as the map is a little vague on this point.
New YorkNew York (minus the western section), but includes all of Vermont
North CarolinaNorth Carolina
OntarioManitoba, northeastern North Dakota, and northwestern Minnesota
OregonOregon and Washington, most of Idaho, a small chunk of northwestern Nevada, and northwestern Montana
PennsylvaniaPennsylvania (minus the north central section)
PhoenixArizona and New Mexico
QuebecQuebec
Rhode IslandRhode Island
South CarolinaSouth Carolina
TennesseeTennessee
The Six NationsWestern portion of New York State and a portion of North central PennsylvaniaNamed after the "Six Nations" Iroquois tribes, comprising the Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora people.
TippecanoeIndiana
Upper CaliforniaCalifornia and western Nevada
VancouverBritish Columbia
VirginiaVirginia and West Virginia
WashingtonSaskatchewan, eastern Montana, western North Dakota, and northwestern South DakotaNamed after George Washington
WilberforceLower Peninsula of MichiganNamed after William Wilberforce

Reception

The Houston Chronicle listed The Two Georges as one of many pieces of fiction that have pictured blacks as the head of the executive branch, in this case Sir Martin Luther King, Governor General of North America.[2] Publishers Weekly praises the novel's "recognizable yet delightfully distorted" world where "engaging characters play out a suspenseful and satisfying story".[3] School Library Journal described the novel as "a fast-paced and gripping story."[3]

References

  1. "Sidewise Awards for Alternate History". Uchronia. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  2. Amy Biancolli (2008). "Fiction has long pictured blacks, women in White House". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  3. 1 2 "The Two Georges on Amazon.com". Amazon. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
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