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What other time travel books should you read?
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Brad Theado
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Dec 02, 2010 07:41AM

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The simplest is represented by Eric Flint's 1632 series. Therein a person or group is plucked up and set in a different time. They remain there and the story is about how the time travelers cope with their new environment and vice-versa. Frequently the time traveler is from now, which makes the characters more approachable and allows for all kinds of in-jokes and cultural references.
The other is about time traveler(s) who move in time more than once. These stories frequently use paradox, or at the very least repercussions of previous actions, as a significant plot element. Tim Powers has written one of my favorite time travel stories where this is a central element from the beginning of the story and the transgression against the timeline hasn't even happened yet.

Island in the Sea of Time

I really like Connie Willis' time travel novels. I'm currently reading All Clear which is the second part of a duology started with Blackout. They really need to be read back-to-back. Here other two time travel novels are stand-alone. They are Doomsday Book and To Say Nothing of the Dog. All of these books are about historians who travel back to certain time periods to research them. Each book has it's own tone and central characters.

If I'm browsing thru the sword and laser section, any book that I've not received a personal recommendation about that talks largely about time travel on the back, gets put back on the shelf.
I'm not saying that time travel stories can't be great. Even those involving paradox. Just for me, I always get this sinking feeling that the author was being lazy or needed a gimic.
I think it was Star Trek TNG and later Star Trek Enterprise that finally killed my inner time travel child. They murdered it once and for all (wait we can go back and time and save your time travel child at the end of the episode)
That being said, I continue to read them from time to time (they are everywhere after all) including Science Fictional Universe 'cause hey, V&T assigned it as our home work after all. (can you still have home work at 40?)


And there are the classics, Twain's "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" and HGW's "The Time Machine."





The Time Traveler's Wife is really good as well.

I also loved The Accidental Time Machine since it stayed away (mostly) from the issue of paradox since the protagonist was only allowed to travel into the future. Every time he pushed the button it was unwrapping an entirely new universe.
There was a Futurama episode not long ago that seemed to be based on the same idea.

Strange, how at the turn of the century writers like H.G. Wells created and used time machines as a effort to go into the future, where now writers use them to go into the past.
A different time (pun intended) I guess. At the turn of the 19th century they believed things could only get better and were anxious to see the marvels to come. Today more people glamorize the past and look backward not forward.
P.S.
Good Forward time travel novels
The Forever War
The Time Machine
The Time Ships
(authorized sequel to the Time Machine - It won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award and the Philip K. Dick Award in 1996 - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Time... )


Replay is excellent. I think I read it was the inspiration for Groundhog Day. Different, but you can see the connection.

It's an excellent character-based book that deals with the problems of coping with "now that you've time traveled, you're rightfully screwed in the head". :)





The book was great. One of the reasons I started reading him.

"The Peace War" by Vernor Vinge is also great but is in the sub-genre of one_way_travel_to_the_future.

To Say Nothing of the Dog good book!
Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait is pretty Interesting too, I enjoyed it. It was nominated for 2008 Philip k dick award.


which actually reminds me, at one point i would read his books the moment they were out, but haven't read one in years (not since Forever Free i think). i really must catch up with the old fella.

While The Time Traveler's Wife was more of a literary novel, I agree that is was an original take on the time travel thing.
I also like Connie Willis' time traveling historians.

Not for the feint hearted - but I really like it. Pratchett was a fan at one time - not sure if he still is

Not for the feint hearted - but I really like it. Pratchett was a ..."
Thanks. Looked so good I had to add that to my list. Shame there isn't an ebook version. Ahh well....


Great book. One of Orson Scott Card's lesser known gems.

It's an excellent character-based book that deals with the problems..."
Absolutely. The Man Who Folded Himself is a great book. Out of print I think, but worth the read if you can track it down.


I recently published The Valkyrie Project which features time travel used in a vein similar to The Terminator. The full novel is currently only available on Amazon (free for Prime Members) but you can start reading here: The Valkyrie Project: Season 1: Episode 1: The Pilot


YES! Excellent series :)



yep, excellent stuff!

Just want to 2nd this. I just finished myself as well (although I realize your's was a while back) and this is a great combo of sword and laser


Really liked this observation.
Secondly, this thread has caused my To-Read list to swell dangerously.

Also, a bit off the beaten track, but there are also books that do time-travel on their own fictional secondary worlds (i.e., instead of through Earth's history). This includes Anne McCaffrey's Dragonflight and the Dragonlance Legends trilogy.

Also enjoyed , The Accidental Time Machine, The Time Traveler's Wife.
Peter Hamilton's void trilogy has some interesting time travel-like situations, that while not really time travel, have the same effect. The implications are interesting.
On fantasy, I loved Night Watch.


I have only read parts of Willis'
Doomsday Book (as part of my Master's thesis for library science--aren't I lucky?!), but her To Say Nothing of the Dog was a fun, engaging read, light-hearted with good paradox hijinx. From what I did read of Doomsday Book, that seemed more serious and intense than the lighter To Say Nothing of the Dog. This makes sense given the time period she set each in.
Books mentioned in this topic
11/22/63 (other topics)The Stand (other topics)
To Say Nothing of the Dog (other topics)
Doomsday Book (other topics)
The Many-Coloured Land (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Peter Hamilton (other topics)Kage Baker (other topics)
Stephen Baxter (other topics)
Olaf Stapledon (other topics)
Orson Scott Card (other topics)
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