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Perfect Timing
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The second paragraph should start out with the name of your main character.


What makes your story worth reading?
Also, celeb sounds glib to me. Consider using full words, maybe.

The advice I found when researching how to write blurb boiled down to:
1) Set the story's scene. Location, time period, genre.
2) Establish main characters.
3) Ask a question that can only be answered by reading the book.
4) Avoid giving away too many plot points. The reader wants to be intrigued, not feel as if you've simply summarized the story. That kills curiosity and with it any incentive to purchase.
I'd also avoid putting the title in the blurb. It seems redundant.
Now it looks like you've actually hit most of those points, but it seems wordy, too reliant on listing aspects of the universe and doesn't hook the reader. Try rewriting it from scratch without the first paragraph to give us a fresh perspective?

Crick Duvall is a caterer, he knows about pizza and cupcakes. He's never heard of planet xxx or a guy called Vigilante Voltek--but he'll need to learn, and fast, or he will never see .... again.

One of my books has a three word blurb. A love story

Caterer Crik Duvall is bewildered. In the city he knows well, now buildings grow, people incorporate animal powers, smart phones know it all, and vehicles defy gravity. He’s been accidentally transported to the future. Where he’s unwanted. To keep their past intact, the future's authorities must return Crik to the moment he left, when gunfire bore down on him. Unless … he can show he was vital to progress. With his cat-woman guide, Tepper — could she be his distant descendant? — the duo dash around to suss out what makes Geotopia work so well for people and planet. Vigilante Voltak, protector of the status quo, pursues them to return the “Pastian" runaway before his allotted 24 hours are up. If by then Crik can prove he’s their Founder, he’ll be a celebrity in his new time.

"Caterer Crik Duvall is bewildered. In the city he though he knew, suddenly buildings grow, people incorporate animal powers, smart phones know it all, and vehicles defy gravity.
He’s been accidentally transported to a future where he’s unwanted. To keep their past intact, the future's authorities must return Crik to the moment he left, a moment when he was fighting for his life. That is, unless he can show he was vital to progress.
With his cat-woman guide, Tepper — could she be his distant descendant? — the duo dash around to suss out what makes Geotopia work so well for people and planet. Vigilante Voltak, protector of the status quo, pursues them to return the “Pastian" runaway before his allotted 24 hours are up. If by then Crik can prove he’s their Founder, he’ll be a celebrity in his new time."
Thoughts?


Also make sure you correct my typo on thought at the beginning :P
On Earth Day 2017, Rogue Phoenix Press released the debut novel of editor Jeffery J. Smith. His Perfect Timing is a romp of a book plus a powerful way to improve our lot (a Citizen’s Dividend). It's like Callenbach’s classic, Ecotopia, but comedic with surprising twists. (BTW, Ernest C. edited my nonfiction work, may he RIP). Perfect Timing conveys the tone of Hitchhiker’s Guide, offers insights like Stranger in a Strange Land, and presents an upbeat alternative, unlike Brave New World.
The hero of Perfect Timing, caterer Crik Duvall, is accidentally transported to the future where buildings grow, people incorporate animal powers, smart phones know it all, and vehicles defy gravity. Vigilante Voltak, protector of the status quo, pursues Crik and his cat-woman guide, Tepper — could she be his distant descendant? — to return the “Pastian" runaway before his allotted 24 hours are up. If Crik can discover why Geotopia works so well for people and planet, not only can he become a celeb but he can also show he was vital to progress. The future's authorities wouldn’t return their Founder to the moment he left, when gunfire bore down on him, would they?
Check it out. These links take you directly to the book: