Making History
(Libby/OverDrive eBook, Kindle)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Contributors
Fry, Stephen Author
Published
Soho Press , 2014.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

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Titles may be read using Kindle devices or with the Kindle app.

Description

Those of us who have already discovered Stephen Fry know him as the brilliant British comedian behind TV series such as Jeeves & Wooster and Blackadder, and the author of two enormously funny novels, The Liar and The Hippopotamus. But his new film (in which he plays Oscar Wilde) and his new novel (this one) represent a somewhat alarming departure from his previous work: They're more serious. Though humor is still an essential ingredient of both, Fry's fans are finally getting to witness the emotional depth that this brilliant polymath usually keeps hidden.In Making History, Fry has bitten off a rather meaty chunk by tackling an at first deceptively simple premise: What if Hitler had never been born? An unquestionable improvement, one would reason--and so an earnest history grad student and an aging German physicist idealistically undertake to bring this about by preventing Adolf's conception. And with their success is launched a brave new world that is in some ways better than ours--but in most ways even worse. Fry's experiment in history makes for his most ambitious novel yet, and his most affecting. His first book to be set mostly in America, it is a thriller with a funny streak, a futuristic fantasy based on one of mankind's darkest realities. It is, in every sense, a story of our times.

More Details

Format
eBook
Street Date
12/30/2014
Language
English
ISBN
9781616955267

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These humor writers are known for the scathing wit and elegant prose they employ to satirize British social class and cultural mores. Though Stephen Fry is more modern in the sense that he addresses sexual orientation and drug addiction, both he and P.G. Wodehouse are charmingly irreverent and outright silly. -- Mike Nilsson
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Availing himself of that durable literary device, time travel, Fry entangles Michael Young, history student at Cambridge University, in a scheme to prevent the birth of Adolf Hitler. An unwitting prey to dozens of the author's entertaining traps--yes, this is a funny novel, albeit an uneasily amusing one--the first trap being his desire to publish his thesis, sort of a "Hitler: The Early Years" written up as a novel. For help he turns to Professor Leo Zuckermann, physicist and son of an SS doctor. The professor burns to purge himself of this parentage, and happens to have invented a time machine; Young happens to have some male sterilization pills he stole from his ex-girlfriend, a geneticist. So they time-transport the pills to poison the wellwater of Adolf's would-be father. That works, but--shazaam!--both Young and Zuckermann inadvertently fall into the time machine. They separately reappear at Princeton University, circa 1996, where the world appears not to have heard of Adolf Hitler. History has, however, produced a Rudolf Glober, under whose aegis Zuckermann's father led a more "successful" career than under Hitler, so Young and Zuckermann must, once they reunite, reenter the time machine and restore history as it was. A simultaneously zany and serious yarn spinner, Fry creates here a bizarre but skillfully controlled alternative world, with the virtuoso pacing and tension that attract readers. --Gilbert Taylor

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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School Library Journal Review

YA-A time-travel tale, of sorts, this novel by a British comedian is alternately funny and thought-provoking. The protagonist, Michael Young, is a trendy, somewhat vapid graduate student at Cambridge who is just finishing his dissertation on the early years of Hitler. Fry alternates chapters describing Michael's actions with sections of his dissertation, allowing a glimpse into the environment that spawned the rise of the Führer. Upon Michael's meeting with physics professor Leo Zuckermann, the nefarious plot thickens. What if Hitler had never been born? What would a world without the Holocaust be like? The two men send male-sterility pills back in time to the water supply used by Hitler's parents. Instantly, Michael finds himself, British accent and all, as an American student at Princeton in an entirely different world. Is it a better world? The novel is full of surprises, with the outcome not even remotely as pristine as Michael had hoped. This is a strange book, full of dry British humor and quips. It also deals with the Nazi "final solution," a topic at the far extreme from laughable. It takes readers into a world of ironic possibilities fraught with disaster, resulting from the best of intentions. YAs will find this an easy read that will stretch their imaginations, entertain them, and leave them thinking about the possible outcomes of the "road not taken."-Carol DeAngelo, Garcia Consulting Inc., EPA Headquarters, Washington, DC (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Library Journal Review

Michael Young, a Cambridge graduate student who has just completed his dissertation on Adolf Hitler's childhood, and German physicist Leo Zuckermann, inventor of a machine that can look into the past, come up with a way to prevent Hitler from ever having been born. Apparently unfamiliar with the Awful Warnings of the time travel genre, Michael and Leo don't hesitate to change history, and the results of their successful experience certainly make a difference. In this clever, thought-provoking, and very funny novel, Fry ably and convincingly imagines a world that never knew Hitler. This intelligent and gripping tale is even better than Fry's witty The Liar (LJ 4/15/93) and should appeal to a wider audience. Highly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/97.]‘Elizabeth Mellett, Brookline P.L., Mass. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Kirkus Book Review

Would the world be better off if Hitler had never lived? British TV personality and novelist Fry (The Hippopotamus, 1995, etc.) inflates a speculative idyll into an overlong, glibly caustic--and often hilarious--social satire. Interfering with history is a shopworn science fiction conceit that, as everyone from H.G. Wells's Time Traveller to Captain Kirk of Star Trek has discovered, is not time well spent: The most absurd paradoxes (murdering your grandfather, etc.) must be resolved to leave everything more or less as it was before the story began. In his third novel, Fry fashions an elaborately contrived plot so that the nebbishy Michael Young, a snide, pop-culture--quoting Cambridge University doctoral student in German history, will meet the guilt-ridden German physicist Leo Zuckermann (whose father was an Auschwitz physician) and use Zuckerman's fancy laptop time machine to drop infertility pills into Hitler's father's morning beer. Then, after some Spielbergian special effects, Young wakes up across the Atlantic to find that he's been circumcised and is now majoring in philosophy at a brutishly conservative Princeton. America is in a Cold War conflict with a German hegemony that spans most of Europe and Asia. In place of Hitler is Rudolf Gloder, a far more intelligent Nazi who encouraged his nation to develop atomic weapons in advance of the US, smashed Russia's Communist revolution, and found a way to make Jews persecute themselves. Young, determined to return the past to its untampered state, learns what history always teaches: Even in a world without Hitler, things can always be worse. An amusing, sophomoric, hyperbolic, academic send-up, timed to coincide with Fry's upcoming role in a film about Oscar Wilde. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

/*Starred Review*/ Availing himself of that durable literary device, time travel, Fry entangles Michael Young, history student at Cambridge University, in a scheme to prevent the birth of Adolf Hitler. An unwitting prey to dozens of the author's entertaining traps--yes, this is a funny novel, albeit an uneasily amusing one--the first trap being his desire to publish his thesis, sort of a "Hitler: The Early Years" written up as a novel. For help he turns to Professor Leo Zuckermann, physicist and son of an SS doctor. The professor burns to purge himself of this parentage, and happens to have invented a time machine; Young happens to have some male sterilization pills he stole from his ex-girlfriend, a geneticist. So they time-transport the pills to poison the wellwater of Adolf's would-be father. That works, but--shazaam!--both Young and Zuckermann inadvertently fall into the time machine. They separately reappear at Princeton University, circa 1996, where the world appears not to have heard of Adolf Hitler. History has, however, produced a Rudolf Glober, under whose aegis Zuckermann's father led a more "successful" career than under Hitler, so Young and Zuckermann must, once they reunite, reenter the time machine and restore history as it was. A simultaneously zany and serious yarn spinner, Fry creates here a bizarre but skillfully controlled alternative world, with the virtuoso pacing and tension that attract readers. ((Reviewed February 1, 1998)) Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews

Copyright 2000 Booklist Reviews
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Library Journal Reviews

Star of a film on Oscar Wilde opening this fall, Fry here imagines what the world would be like had there been no Hitler. Copyright 1998 Library Journal Reviews

Copyright 1998 Library Journal Reviews
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Library Journal Reviews

Michael Young, a Cambridge graduate student who has just completed his dissertation on Adolf Hitler's childhood, and German physicist Leo Zuckermann, inventor of a machine that can look into the past, come up with a way to prevent Hitler from ever having been born. Apparently unfamiliar with the Awful Warnings of the time travel genre, Michael and Leo don't hesitate to change history, and the results of their successful experience certainly make a difference. In this clever, thought-provoking, and very funny novel, Fry ably and convincingly imagines a world that never knew Hitler. This intelligent and gripping tale is even better than Fry's witty The Liar (LJ 4/15/93) and should appeal to a wider audience. Highly recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 11/1/97.]?Elizabeth Mellett, Brookline P.L., Mass. Copyright 1998 Cahners Business Information.

Copyright 1998 Cahners Business Information.
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School Library Journal Reviews

YA-A time-travel tale, of sorts, this novel by a British comedian is alternately funny and thought-provoking. The protagonist, Michael Young, is a trendy, somewhat vapid graduate student at Cambridge who is just finishing his dissertation on the early years of Hitler. Fry alternates chapters describing Michael's actions with sections of his dissertation, allowing a glimpse into the environment that spawned the rise of the Führer. Upon Michael's meeting with physics professor Leo Zuckermann, the nefarious plot thickens. What if Hitler had never been born? What would a world without the Holocaust be like? The two men send male-sterility pills back in time to the water supply used by Hitler's parents. Instantly, Michael finds himself, British accent and all, as an American student at Princeton in an entirely different world. Is it a better world? The novel is full of surprises, with the outcome not even remotely as pristine as Michael had hoped. This is a strange book, full of dry British humor and quips. It also deals with the Nazi "final solution," a topic at the far extreme from laughable. It takes readers into a world of ironic possibilities fraught with disaster, resulting from the best of intentions. YAs will find this an easy read that will stretch their imaginations, entertain them, and leave them thinking about the possible outcomes of the "road not taken."-Carol DeAngelo, Garcia Consulting Inc., EPA Headquarters, Washington, DC Copyright 1998 School Library Journal Reviews

Copyright 1998 School Library Journal Reviews
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Fry, S. (2014). Making History . Soho Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Fry, Stephen. 2014. Making History. Soho Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Fry, Stephen. Making History Soho Press, 2014.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Fry, S. (2014). Making history. Soho Press.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Fry, Stephen. Making History Soho Press, 2014.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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