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Alternate History sci-fi books

The past took a different turn — and so did everything after.

240 books
Newest firstMost popular
In Plain Sight
In Plain Sight
Dan Willis
PG-13Adult 18+
Chainbreaker (2) (Timekeeper)
Chainbreaker (2) (Timekeeper)
Tara Sim
PG-13YA 12-17
Madeleine L'Engle: The Wrinkle in Time Quartet (LOA #309): A Wrinkle in Time / A Wind in the Door / A Swiftly Tilting Planet / Many Waters (Library of America Madeleine L'Engle Edition)
Madeleine L'Engle: The Wrinkle in Time Quartet (LOA #309): A Wrinkle in Time / A Wind in the Door / A Swiftly Tilting Planet / Many Waters (Library of America Madeleine L'Engle Edition)
Madeleine L'Engle
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The Last Musketeer
The Last Musketeer
Stuart Gibbs
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Last Day on Mars (Chronicle of the Dark Star, 1)
Last Day on Mars (Chronicle of the Dark Star, 1)
Kevin Emerson
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Blood of Dragons
Blood of Dragons
Jack Campbell
PG-13YA 12-17
Timekeeper
Timekeeper
Tara Sim
PG-13YA 12-17
Ursula K. Le Guin: The Hainish Novels and Stories: A Library of America Boxed Set (Library of America, 296-297)
Ursula K. Le Guin: The Hainish Novels and Stories: A Library of America Boxed Set (Library of America, 296-297)
Ursula K. Le Guin
PG-13Adult 18+
The Last Magician Volume 1
The Last Magician Volume 1
Lisa Maxwell
PG-13YA 12-17
For Steam and Country
For Steam and Country
Jon Del Arroz
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Machine Learning
Machine Learning
Hugh Howey
PG-13Adult 18+
Nemo Rising
Nemo Rising
C. Courtney Joyner
PG-13Adult 18+
Fields of Iron: A steampunk adventure novel
Fields of Iron: A steampunk adventure novel
Shelley Adina
PGAdult 18+
Re:Zero: Starting Life in Another World, Vol. 1
Re:Zero: Starting Life in Another World, Vol. 1
Tappei Nagatsuki
PG-13YA 12-17
A Dead Djinn in Cairo
A Dead Djinn in Cairo
P. Djèlí Clark
PG-13Adult 18+
The City of Ember Complete Boxed Set (People of Sparks; Diamond of Darkhold; Prophet of Yonwood)
The City of Ember Complete Boxed Set (People of Sparks; Diamond of Darkhold; Prophet of Yonwood)
Jeanne DuPrau
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Ink and Bone (The Great Library)
Ink and Bone (The Great Library)
Rachel Caine
PG-13YA 12-17
Dark Seed
Dark Seed
Simon West-Bulford
RAdult 18+
Trojans
Trojans
Philip Purser-Hallard
PG-13Adult 18+
The Champions of 1943: Scar Tissue
The Champions of 1943: Scar Tissue
Kenneth Tam
PG-13Adult 18+
The Big Book of Science Fiction
The Big Book of Science Fiction
Jeff VanderMeer
RAdult 18+
Time's Echo: A CHRONOS Files Novella
Time's Echo: A CHRONOS Files Novella
Rysa Walker
PG-13YA 12-17
The Last American Vampire
The Last American Vampire
Seth Grahame-Smith
RAdult 18+
The Eighth Day
The Eighth Day
Dianne K. Salerni
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Born Wicked
Born Wicked
Jessica Spotswood
PGYA 12-17
After Ozz
After Ozz
Bart Baker
PG-13YA 12-17
Revealed (7) (The Missing)
Revealed (7) (The Missing)
Margaret Peterson Haddix
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Curtsies & Conspiracies
Curtsies & Conspiracies
Gail Carriger
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Castaways in Time
Castaways in Time
Sarah Woodbury
PG-13Adult 18+
The Unnaturalists
The Unnaturalists
Tiffany Trent
PGYA 12-17

About the Alternate History trope

Alternate history performs a controlled experiment on the past. Change one outcome — a battle, an assassination, an invention — and trace how the present would warp around it. Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle imagines an America that lost the Second World War, occupied and uneasy, and uses that nightmare to interrogate reality, complicity, and resistance. The power of the form is recognition twisted just out of true: a world close enough to ours to feel real, and wrong enough to unsettle on every page.

The best practitioners treat the counterfactual with rigor, working out the second- and third-order consequences rather than indulging a single gimmick. Kim Stanley Robinson's The Years of Rice and Salt erases medieval Europe's population and imagines centuries reshaped by Islamic and Buddhist civilizations instead. Mary Robinette Kowal's The Calculating Stars accelerates the space race after a catastrophe, asking who gets to be an astronaut when the timeline shifts beneath them. The genre rewards readers who love history's contingency — the vertiginous sense that everything might just as easily have gone otherwise.

Alternate history is the sober cousin of the multiverse: where multiverse fiction lets characters travel between branching realities, alternate history commits fully to one divergent timeline and lives inside it, with no hopping home. The result is part thought experiment, part historical novel, and part mirror — a way of seeing our own world more clearly by building the one next door and noticing exactly which beams hold it up. It asks the oldest question the past can pose: how much of what we are was ever truly inevitable? Harry Turtledove turned the mode into an entire career, and at its sharpest it does what the best history does anyway: it makes the actual past feel suddenly, thrillingly fragile, as if it might still slip its tracks.

Why readers love it

  • A single hinge of history rewired
  • Worlds familiar yet wrong
  • History's contingency made vivid
  • One timeline, lived in fully