Inventing counterfactual histories is a common pastime of modern day historians, both amateur and professional. They speculate about an America ruled by Jefferson Davis, a Europe that never threw off Hitler, or a second term for JFK. In her book Telling It Like It Wasn't (2018), Catherine Gallagher (English) examines how counterfactual history works and to what ends. Beginning in 18th-century Europe, where the idea first took hold in philosophical disputes about Providence, and moving through alternate histories of the Civil War and World War II, she shows how the counterfactual habit of replaying the recent past can shape popular understandings of the actual events themselves.