SS-GB

Based upon some mentioned here, I am almost finished reading SS-GB by Len Deighton. Any suggestions for book along this vein? Fiction set in a WWIi Nazi Society. Not nessesarily alt-hist, but I do like those.

I just ordered Fatherland - Robert Harris.

The Children’s War by JN Stroyar

Google it for a description.

I picked up a copy of SS GB after reading that thread too. I’m almost through it, and have enjoyed it quite a bit. Thanks to whoever made that suggestion. Fatherland is good too - I read it a few years back. I can’t think of any other thriller/mystery-type post-Nazi victory books. I keep wanting to say The Odessa File, but that just has regular non-victorious Nazis. Good book though.

The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick, set in the early 1960s, following an Axis victory in WW2. The departure point seems to be the assassination of FDR just before he took office in 1933 (IRL, the mayor of Chicago was killed but FDR survived the attempt). The Japanese and the Germans split the U.S. down the middle.

You might try to find a copy of “The Sound of His Horn”.

In the Presence of Mine Enemies

Wiki link

Making History by Stephen Fry. Not a WWII Nazi society, but what would happen if the Nazis won. It’s alternate history, and very clever.

I’ve read mixed reviews of the recent Farthing by Jo Walton, an English country-house murder mystery set during the Nazi occupation: http://www.amazon.com/Farthing-Jo-Walton/dp/076535280X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1239283124&sr=1-1

The sequels are Ha’penny and Half a Crown.

How about a novella set in WWII that’s continuing long after it ended in our world? Sort of science fiction/fantasy.

David Brin’s Thor Meets Captain America.

The link goes to the story itself. It’s included in Hitler Victorious–an anthology compiled by Greg Benford & Martin Greenberg.

Not quite what the OP is looking for, but I just heard “Summer in Paris, Light from the Sky” by Ken Scholes in a podcast today, and I was blown away. A very alternate Hitler, indeed! (Link is the the story on line.)

The Divide by William Overgard is light SF but enjoyable.