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| | | | | | “Do Over!”
by Jeff Kirvin First publication: Kindle E-Book, 13 Feb 2011
Our hero, Rick “Richie” Preston, is ten years out of high school and doing nothing but flipping burgers when a fight with his father (and bargain landlord) tosses him back into his senior year of high school where he gets a chance to redo everything so long as he agrees to not alter other people’s lives.
Even though I didn’t see this released until 2011, it is set in 1998 and 1988, and I think the writing predated the identically named and similarly plotted 2002 TV show. In any case, I’m glad that Denver resident Jeff Kirvin released this story on Kindle. As I stood gaping at the rows of ten-year-old magazines, a fortyish, balding man sidled up next to me. ”Pretty cool, huh, Preston?” | |
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| | | | | | The Ian’s Ions and Eons Stories
by Paul Levinson First story: Analog, Apr 2011
In the first story (“Ian’s Ions and Eons”), a man travels back to December 2000, hoping to alter the momentus Supreme Court decision of that month.
Ian and his cohorts have a reprise in “Ian, Isaac and John” (Nov 2011), where a descendant of David Bowe comes back to 1975, purportedly to improve the mix on a Bowe track, but quite possibly with additional motives involving John Lennon. And there are more stories to come, all in Analog.- Ian’s Ions and Eons (Apr 2011) The 2000 election
- Ian, Isaac and John (Nov 2011) David Bowe and John Lennon
- Ian, George and George (Dec 2013) Orson Welles to the 1970s
The Supreme Court will announce its decision the day after tomorrow. Gore’s people want the recount to proceed in Florida. Bush’s do not. | |
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| | | | | | The Time-Traveling Fashionista Series
by Bianca Turetsky First book: Apr 2011
Twelve-year-old Louise Lambert has a passion for vintage fashions from the turn of the century through the 70s, although when she wakes up as a seventeen-year-old actress on the Titanic, she’s worried about more than just fashion.
I found this book in the ship library on a cruise of my own (no, not the Titanic, though we did see some icebergs. The first book, on the Titanic, was followed by two others.- The Time-Traveling Fashionista (Apr 2011) on the Titanic
- The Time-Traveling Fashionista (Sep 2012) at the Palace of Marie Antoinette
- The Time-Traveling Fashionista (Dec 2013) and Cleopatra, Queen of the Nile
It seemed as though on the inside she was Louise Lambert, but to everyone else she was this Miss Baxter, a gorgeous teenage actress. Definitely rich. Probably even famous. She smiled and unconsciously began twirling a strand of hair between her thumb and index finger. That was how she did her best thinking, and none of this made any sense. Somehow she had woken up in the body of a woman who was taking a first-class trip on the White Star Line, with her own personal maide and her uncle/manager, from England to New York City. | |
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| | Source Code
by Ben Ripley (Duncan Jones, director) First release: 1 Apr 2011
Spoiler alert! I usually try to keep my spoilers mild, but I am irresistibly drawn to spoil Source Code, since the inventor of The Source Code in the movie explicitly says, “Source Code is not time travel. Rather, Source Code is time reassignment. It gives us access to a parallel reality.” But what does the inventor know? Go watch the movie (which I enjoyed) before reading on!
A common form of time travel is when the traveler goes back in time and a new reality branches off. That’s the form of time travel that I see in Source Code, and from my reading of an interview, perhaps the director sees it that way, too. This view fits better than the parallel worlds postulate of the inventor, because each time the captain goes back, he is in exactly the same moment, with the same passengers, same comment coming from future girlfriend, same woman about to spill coffee, etc. If he were shifting to a parallel universe, then perhaps some things would differ before he arrives. So, I see it as branching worlds time travel, with the twist that the mechanism to do the time travel is to pop the traveler’s consciousness inside the head of a dead person at about eight minutes before the death. I believe that the original world where the traveler came from (and usually returns to) continues along its original path (as evinced by the fact that after one return in which he saved girlfriend, there was no record of her being saved). What is the Source Code? | |
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| | “Some Fortunate Future Day”
by Cassandra Clare First publication: Steampunk!, 6 Oct 2011
In a war-torn, fable-like, Victorian kind of world, Rose’s father goes off to war leaving her various inventions: talking dolls, a garden robot, a mechanical cook, and a time device that comes in handy when a wounded soldier makes his way to her doorstep. When he said that, he looked at Rose’s mother’s portrait, hanging over their fireplace mantel. He had invented his time device only a few short months after she had died. It had always been one of his greatest regrets in life, though Rose sometimes wondered whether he could have invented it at all without the all-consuming power of grief to drive him. Most of his other inventions did not work nearly as well. The garden robot often digs up flowers instead of weeds. The mechanical cook can make only one kind of soup. And the talking dolls never tell Rose what she wants to hear. | |
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| | “Shall I Tell You the Trouble with Time Travel?”
by Adam Roberts First publication: Solaris Rising: The New Solaris Book of Science Fiction, Nov 2011
Professor Hermann Bradley has managed to have his time travel device last seventeen seconds in various past times before spectacularly exploding. Now he’s on the verge of cracking that seventeen second barrier (and, according to the narrator, possibly the wiping out of the dinosaurs as well as hundreds of thousands of people in Hiroshima, Nagasaki and Tunguska), but the damnable Professor Notkin is blocking him, claiming that Bradley has committed crimes against humanity (and perhaps against dinosaurity). He steps through into a room and his beaming, grinning, smiling, happy-o jolly-o face shouts to the world: “We’ve done it, we’ve cracked it—thirteen seconds!” | |
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| | Juko’s Time Machine
by Kai Barry (Barry, director) First release: 8 Dec 2011
When the wife of Juko’s lifelong friend Jed gets fed up with Juko living in their garage, Jed comes up with his best plan yet, to build a time machine so Juko can go back in time and win the heart of the girl whom he's waited twenty years for, even if Juko isn’ cool like her finance is.
Lauren Struck, one of the producers, sent me a press kit and an invitation to stream the film in May of 2012, precisely 35 years after my first press-kit-and-invitation-to-a-fan-to-see-an-sf-movie-preview—that other one being from a little-known producer named George something, of course, so Lauren is in excellent company. (Thank you, Lauren.) Jed? Are you Jed Four? I think you’re Jed Four. | |
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And Still More Time Travel of 2011 The story pilots haven’t yet taken these adventures out for a test drive. | “The Third Millennium” by Laura E. Bradford, 365 Tomorrows, 1 Feb 2011 —teen time travelers
“No One Ever Considers the Unforeseen Consequences” by Patricia Stewart, 365 Tomorrows, 16 Feb 2011 —killing a despot’s ancestor
“Time Travel” by Duncan Shields, 365 Tomorrows, 22 Feb 2011 —amateur time traveler
“Traveler” by Duncan Shields, 365 Tomorrows, 17 Mar 2011 —traveler emerges from alley
“Serial Killer” by Duncan Shields, 365 Tomorrows, 26 May 2011 —serial killer targets travelers
“Coincidences” by K. Clarke, 365 Tomorrows, 23 Jun 2011 —Why so many travelers at my house?
“So the Guy at the Bar Turns to Me and Says . . .” by Macpherson, 365 Tomorrows, 23 Aug 2011 —dead authors sign books
“Introdus” by Shields, 365 Tomorrows, 16 Nov 2011 —700,000 burning time travelers
“Grandfather Clock” by Duncan Shields, 365 Tomorrows, 19 Dec 2011 —grandfather paradox twist
Romance Time Travel of 2011 Bodice rips are a more workaday mode of time travel than time ships. | River of Time 1: Waterfall by Lisa Tawn Bergren
River of Time 2: Cascade by Lisa Tawn Bergren
River of Time 3: Torrent by Lisa Tawn Bergren
Highlander 8: Highlander for the Holidays by Janet Chapman
Civil War Brides 4: The Bride Ransom by Tracey Jane Jackson
Civil War Brides 5: The Rebel Bride by Tracey Jane Jackson
Civil War Brides 6: The Bride Star by Tracey Jane Jackson
The Rose Garden by Susanna Kearsley
The Rose Garden by Susanna Kearsley
Daughters of the Glen 7: Healing the Highlander by Melissa Mayhue
Daughters of the Glen 8: Highlander's Curse by Melissa Mayhue
Timeless 1: Timeless by Alexandra Monir
Time Spirit 1: Golden Blood by Melissa Pearl
Time Spirit 2: Black Blood by Melissa Pearl
A Knight in Central Park by Theresa Ragan
Tennessee Waltz 1: Kiss Me, I'm Irish by Bella Street
After Cilmeri 0: Daughter of Time by Sarah Woodbury
After Cilmeri 1: Footsteps in Time by Sarah Woodbury
After Cilmeri 2: Prince of Time by Sarah Woodbury
No Time Travel. Move along. | “The Most Important Thing in the World” by Steve Bein, Asimov’s Science Fiction, Mar 2011 [no definitive time travel ]
In the Name of the King 2: Two Worlds by Michel C. Nachoff, 3 Apr 2014 [secondary worlds ]
“Eleven Minutes” by Gareth L. Powell, Interzone, Jul 2011 [despite title, no time travel ]
“Hand and Space” by Dean Wesley Smith, Self-Published, Aug 2012 [fountain of youth ]
“Thief of Futures” by D. Thomas Minton, Lightspeed, Sep 2011 [surreal ]
“Thirty Seconds from Now” by John Chu, Boston Review, 1 Sep 2011 [precognition ]
“The Little Bear” by Justina Robson, Lightspeed, Oct 2011 [parallel universes ]
“Time to Go” by Erin M. Hartshorn, 3 Nov 2011 [despite title, no time travel ]
“A Stitch in Space-Time” by Nicky Drayden, Daily Science Fiction, 14 Dec 2011 [despite title, no time travel ]
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