MarketSidewise Award for Alternate History
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Sidewise Award for Alternate History

The Sidewise Awards for Alternate History were established in 1995 to recognize the best alternate history stories and novels of the year.

Overview
The awards take their name from the 1934 short story "Sidewise in Time" by Murray Leinster, in which a strange storm causes portions of Earth to swap places with their analogs from other timelines. The awards were created by Steven H Silver, Evelyn C. Leeper, and Robert B. Schmunk. Over the years, the number of judges has fluctuated between three and eight and have included judges in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and South Africa. Two awards are normally presented each year, usually at WorldCon or at NASFiC. The Short-Form award is presented to a work under 60,000 words in length. The Long-Form award is presented to a work or works longer than 60,000 words, which may include a single novel or a multi-volume series. The judges have four times also recognized an individual with a Special Achievement Award in recognition for works published prior to the award's inception or for other contributions to the genre. ==Award winners==
Award winners
Note: The Sidewise Awards are announced as for the year of publication rather than by the year of award presentation. Long Form :1995Paul J. McAuley, ''Pasquale's Angel'' :1996Stephen Baxter, Voyage :1997Harry Turtledove, How Few Remain :1998Stephen Fry, Making History :1999Brendan DuBois, Resurrection Day :2000Mary Gentle, Ash: A Secret History :2001 – J. N. Stroyar, ''The Children's War'' :2002(tie): Martin J. Gidron (name since changed to Martin Berman-Gorvine), The Severed Wing and Harry Turtledove, Ruled Britannia :2003Murray Davies, Collaborator :2004Philip Roth, The Plot Against America :2005Ian R. MacLeod, The Summer Isles :2006Charles Stross, The Family Trade, The Hidden Family, and The Clan Corporate :2007Michael Chabon, ''The Yiddish Policemen's Union'' :2008Chris Roberson, ''The Dragon's Nine Sons'' :2023Francis Spufford, Cahokia Jazz :2024Sophie Burnham, Sargassa Short Form :1995Stephen Baxter, "Brigantia's Angels" :1996Walter Jon Williams, "Foreign Devils" (in War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches) :1997William Sanders, "The Undiscovered" :1998Ian R. MacLeod, The Summer Isles :1999Alain Bergeron, "The Eighth Register" (translated by Howard Scott) :2000Ted Chiang, "Seventy-Two Letters" :2001Ken MacLeod, The Human Front :2002William Sanders, "Empire" :2003Chris Roberson, "O One" :2004Warren Ellis, The Ministry of Space :2005Lois Tilton, "Pericles the Tyrant" :2006Gardner Dozois, "Counterfactual" :2007(tie): Michael Flynn, "Quaestiones Super Caelo Et Mundo" & Kristine Kathryn Rusch, "Recovering Apollo 8" :2008Mary Rosenblum, "Sacrifice" :2009Alastair Reynolds, "The Fixation" :2010Alan Smale, "A Clash of Eagles" :2011Lisa Goldstein, "Paradise Is a Walled Garden" :2012Rick Wilber, "Something Real"' :2013Vylar Kaftan, "The Weight of the Sunrise" :2014Ken Liu, "The Long Haul: From the Annals of Transportation, The Pacific Monthly, May 2009" :2015Bill Crider, "It Doesn't Matter Anymore" :2016(tie): Daniel M. Bensen, "Treasure Fleet" & Adam Rovner, "What If the Jewish State Had Been Established in East Africa" :2017Harry Turtledove, "Zigeuner" :2018Oscar (Xiu) Ramirez and Emmanuel Valtierra, Codex Valtierra :2019Harry Turtledove, "Christmas Truce" :2020Matthew Kresal, "Moonshot" :2021Alan Smale, "Gunpowder Treason" :2022(tie): Eric Choi, "A Sky and a Heaven" & Wole Talabi "A Dream of Electric Mothers" :2023 – Rosemary Claire Smith, "Apollo in Retrograde" :2024L. Briar, "A Brother's Oath" Special Achievement :1995L. Sprague de Camp, lifetime achievement :1997Robert Sobel, For Want of a Nail :1999Randall Garrett, the Lord Darcy series :2018Eric Flint, for support of writers in the alternate history genre, most notably via the 1632 series ==References==
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