Books tagged with: time loop

  • Endymion OmnibusDan Simmons
    Endymion Omnibus
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Sequel to Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion – there's no reason to read this book if you haven't read those two books. Actually the question is if there's any reason to read this book at all! Fall of Hyperion ends the story of the Cantos and the Web quite nicely, with nearly no loose ends. So that's no...

  • Galileo’s DreamKim Stanley Robinson
    Galileo’s Dream
    by Kim Stanley Robinson
    Science Fiction

    Galileo’s Dream is a brand new novel from Kim Stanley Robinson and follows Galileo on an amazing journey from the dawn of the modern age to a future on the brink of a scientific breakthrough. While on the brink of the modern world, Late Renaissance Italy is still surrounded by Alchemy and the teachi...

  • IliumDan Simmons
    Ilium
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Dan Simmons can write just about any genre he takes a stab at and be good at it. Carrion Comfort for horror, Crook Factory for War/thriller and of course the Hyperion Saga for some of the best SF ever written. Ilium is a meta-literary meta-historical science fiction story. That's a lot of meta. I be...

  • OrionBen Bova
    Orion
    by Ben Bova
    Science Fiction

    Orion is a time travel science fiction novel by Ben Bova. The idea is so neat, that this easily could have been one of my all time favourites. It's not, but I'll get back to that. Two warriors Orion, The Hunter, and Ahriman, The Dark One, travel from each end of time and meet at important points in...

  • Our Childrens ChildrenClifford D Simak
    Our Childrens Children
    by Clifford D Simak
    Science Fiction

    Our Childrens Children is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Clifford D Simak. It must have been three or four years since I read this book last - enough time for my rotten brain to forget the most of it. Our Children's Children is a small master piece from one of the old masters of...

  • Terminal EarthMichael Stewart
    Terminal Earth
    by Michael Stewart
    Science Fiction

    Terminal Earth is a collection of original short stories that all feature the end of the world in some way, edited by Michael Stewart and Neil Thomas. With 23 tales of the apocalypse, Terminal Earth offers a great deal of compelling tales from talented authors. Despite the common theme there are som...

  • The Beautiful LandAlan Averill
    The Beautiful Land
    by Alan Averill
    Science Fiction

    The Beautiful Land makes excellent use of the parallel dimensions theory as it relates to time travel. Here you don't directly travel in time but to a different point in a parallel world which could be almost like our own or vastly different depending on the changes that have taken place. Here thoug...

  • The Big TimeFritz Leiber
    The Big Time
    by Fritz Leiber
    Science Fiction

    The Big Time won the coveted Hugo award for best novel in 1958 - the fourth novel to win such award; a science fiction story written by an author best known for his fantasy stories. It's unique in style and form, reading as much as a play as it does a novel. This feeling is re-enforced by the fact t...

  • The First Fifteen Lives of Harry AugustClaire North
    Science Fiction

    I often stay clear of books recommended by Richard and Judy, I find their "recommendations" largely restricted to wishy washy "popular" and "literary" fiction. However, like a thousand Monkeys at a thousand typewriters random chance dictates that they "should" occasionally strike gold and The First...

  • The Proteus OperationJames P Hogan
    The Proteus Operation
    by James P Hogan
    Science Fiction

    The Proteus Operation is a science fiction novel by James P Hogan. Once upon a time in the late 21st century, everything was just a-okay and everybody where happy. Utopia had been reached. Well, except for a couple of malcontents who where rather bored with all this be-good-to-thy-neighbour and nobo...

  • The Sirens of TitanKurt Vonnegut
    The Sirens of Titan
    by Kurt Vonnegut
    Science Fiction

    Reviewed by Philip Graham. Kurt Vonnegut was, until recently, my personal Leo Tolstoy. By that I mean that I knew his name, I knew he was a famed author, and I knew that I really should have read more, or even some, of his work. So finally I went out and got "The Sirens of Titan". I chose this book...

  • The Time Travellers AlmanacAnn Vandermeer
    The Time Travellers Almanac
    by Ann Vandermeer
    Science Fiction

    Back in November 2011 Jeff and Ann VanderMeer published "The Weird", the ultimate collection of weird tales of the last 100 years. This November they turn their attentions to Time Travel in another landmark Tome. This is without a doubt the most definitive collection of stories featuring time travel...

  • Time and Time AgainBen Elton
    Time and Time Again
    by Ben Elton
    Science Fiction

    Ben Elton is a talented fellow. I've loved most of the TV programs he's been involved in from the Young Ones and Blackadder to Blessed and the Thin Blue Line . His humour is often satirical, off-the-wall and almost always makes me laugh. The only novel I've read of his prior to Time and Time Again i...

  • Timelike InfinityStephen Baxter
    Timelike Infinity
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Timelike Infinity is a science fiction novel by Stephen Baxter. Having read Baxter's The Timeships I had quite high expectations for this book, maybe too high, because I found Timelike Infinity to be rather disappointing. In the first two thirds of the book nothing really happens and when I finally...

  • TimeshiftPhillip Ellis Jackson
    Timeshift
    by Phillip Ellis Jackson
    Science Fiction

    Timeshift is a science fiction novel by Philip Ellis Jackson. Sometime in our near future the united states will separate into two different countries, a bit after that we have a small nuclear war and after that some moron releases a new life-form that eats everything in its path and leaves the surf...

  • Anno FrankensteinJonathan Green
    Anno Frankenstein
    by Jonathan Green
    Fantasy

    Anno Frankenstein is a novel in the Pax Britannia series featuring the intrepid adventurer Ulysses Quicksilver. In this alternative universe, Magna Britannia is the undisputed superpower of the world whereas since the second great European war, Hitler’s Nazi party has been reduced to the status of a...

  • The Educated ApeRobert Rankin
    The Educated Ape
    by Robert Rankin
    Fantasy

    Robert Rankin is without a doubt one of the select few funniest and sometimes strangest authors alive today. Often his novels are more than a little odd and with The Educated Ape he manages to merge these styles with a steampunk theme and some quite brilliant characterisation. This is the third nove...

  • The Janus CycleTej Turner
    The Janus Cycle
    by Tej Turner
    Fantasy

    Every now and then I am sent something that stretches the boundaries of my reading interest. The Janus Cycle is one such book. Whilst this book is billed as a novel, it is really a collection of linked short stories. The linked theme follows a disparate group of individuals seemingly connected by th...

  • Four Past MidnightStephen King
    Four Past Midnight
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Four Past Midnight is a collection of four short stories by the master of horror, Stephen King. I guess that four stories in just under a thousand pages, means that each of the stories deserves their own review and that's just what you are going to get. Before I get to the stories, I'll just make a...

  • The Gone WorldTom Sweterlitsch
    The Gone World
    by Tom Sweterlitsch
    Science Fiction

    This Christmas a member of the family introduced me to NCIS. For those who have yet to discover this long-running US-based TV show it's a police-procedural series that follows the Naval Criminal Investigation Service. Until this time I hadn't even known such an organisation existed, not to mention t...

  • Fictional AlignmentMike French
    Fictional Alignment
    by Mike French
    Science Fiction

    Mike French returns to the world of An Android Awakes with this initially more conventionally presented sequel. Fictional Alignment is not the same animal as its predecessor – an oversized picture story book anthology of the attempts of Android PD121928 to create fiction that can be accepted by its...

  • The Time Machine and The Island of Doctor MoreauHG Wells

    Illustration ©Grahame Baker-Smith from The Folio Society edition of The Time Machine by H.G. Wells The work of H. G. Wells is both seminal and formative to our current interest in Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy. The collection of these two novellas in one volume is a common publication format....

  • LentJo Walton
    Lent
    by Jo Walton
    Fantasy

    Jo Walton is a multi-award winning, talented and often under-appreciated author. A number of her novels examine philosophy, religion, divinity and humanity.  Lent continues some of these themes along with her knack for creating irresistible, thoughtful and engaging fiction. Girolamo Savanarola has l...

  • Shatter WarDana Fredsti
    Shatter War
    by Dana Fredsti
    Science Fiction

    What would you do should a sudden cataclysmic event effect the Earth? The answer is that you will probably be dead, but if you are lucky enough to be the protagonist of a book you are likely to have survived. It would be a very short book otherwise. The events in Dana Fredsti and David Fitzgerald’s...

  • Echo CyclePatrick Edwards
    Echo Cycle
    by Patrick Edwards
    Science Fiction

    Above all genres, science fiction is my favourite. Why? Because anything can happen. You can have epic space battles between alien races you cannot pronounce or go in the other direction and create a subtle alternative reality where words have the power to kill. Ideas run the entire gamete and they...

  • The Seven Deaths of Evelyn HardcastleStuart Turton
    Science Fiction

    I am not an argumentative fellow and the only two full on blowouts I can remember are well within the geek sphere. Who was the actor alongside Harrison Ford at the start of  Raiders of the Lost Ark  and how does time travel work? I may have been wrong about Alfred  Molina  but I am right about time...

  • Dare to KnowJames Kennedy
    Dare to Know
    by James Kennedy
    Science Fiction

    If you could find out your exact time of death down to the last second, would you take up the option? For some it could be liberating, they will pack their lives until the last moment. For others, their death will become even more of a looming presence as it draws ever near. In James Kennedy’s  Dare...

  • Expect Me TomorrowChristopher Priest
    Expect Me Tomorrow
    by Christopher Priest
    Science Fiction

    I am at an age where I genuinely believe that Science Fiction is the best genre there is and I have read enough books of all types to have developed this opinion. I love it because it can be so many different things. Space opera to speculative fiction. A Sci Fi book can also be a riddle wrapped in a...

  • FluxJinwoo Chong
    Flux
    by Jinwoo Chong
    Science Fiction

    Time travel is one of the most complex and difficult concepts to write in fiction. On the screen you can use visuals as shorthand to try and explain what on Earth is going on, but in fiction you are required to explain it all, or not. There is a choice. Do you go down the route of hard science and t...

  • Some Desperate GloryEmily Tesh
    Some Desperate Glory
    by Emily Tesh
    Science Fiction

    Stories are often told from the side of good, the plucky underdog who fights against the armies of evil only to be victorious, but what about a book told from the side of the agitators, the terrorists the anarchists? These are all labels and Emily Tesh sets out to prove in Some Desperate Glory that...

  • The First Bright ThingJ R Dawson
    The First Bright Thing
    by J R Dawson
    Fantasy

    Circuses are magical places; they are also mysterious and occasionally a bit murderous. All the elements that make them perfect for romantic visions of running away and visiting new places each week, are also perfect for someone who likes to snatch victims and not be around when the police start to...

  • MyriadJoshua David Bellin
    Myriad
    by Joshua David Bellin
    Science Fiction

    I love time travel stories as you can tie yourself in knots figuring out what is going on. A writer can choose to do one of two things about the complexity of it all. Explore in great depth and try to make the inherent paradox work, or just go with the flow. Joshua David Bellin’s Myriad feels like a...

  • The Unmaking of June FarrowAdrienne Young
    The Unmaking of June Farrow
    by Adrienne Young
    Science Fiction

    I love time travel stories, but the entire concept is a paradox. It just cannot happen. What happens to the version of you that was in the past/present once you have travelled? It can be hard to even think about it, but what happens if you live this paradox? The Farrow woman have all been cursed wit...

  • The Principle MomentsEsmie Jikiemi-Pearson
    The Principle Moments
    by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson
    Science Fiction

    You see it more often in fantasy than science fiction, but there are stories about young people living a life of drudgery only to be plucked into being exceptional as if fate is playing with them. It is a comfortable coming of age trope that has worked so well, so many times, but what if fate did co...

  • Shoestring TheoryMariana Costa
    Shoestring Theory
    by Mariana Costa
    Horror

    The creation of a new subgenre comes fraught with danger, there may be a good reason it did not arise before. I am seeing an increase in what can be called Cosy Fantasy, novels that have many of the tropes of the genre but concentrate on character interaction over the action. The threat is that Fant...

  • New Year, New You: A Speculative Anthology of ReinventionChris Campbell

    What makes a bunch of short stories gathered together a collection? It could be the works of the same author, or it could be some sort of theme that means they are all derived from the same place. A collection's origins can significantly impact the type of stories you are about to read. Is it an est...

  • Captain America: The Shield of Sam WilsonJesse J. Holland
    Science Fiction

    Graphic Novels have an advantage over prose in terms of kinetic visuals. You can show in a panel the action taking place and all the colours, in a book you need to describe this. This advantage can be too tempting for some and the book becomes all action and not enough depth. The best comics are alw...

  • A Rebel's History of MarsNadia Afifi
    A Rebel's History of Mars
    by Nadia Afifi
    Science Fiction

    When we have finally managed to destroy Earth, some of us may already be living on Mars. If you stay inside the domes, I hear it can be quite pleasant. However, what happens when we start to destroy Mars? The issue with all these planets is not the landscape or the lack of oxygen, it is the fact tha...

  • The Night AlphabetJoelle Taylor
    The Night Alphabet
    by Joelle Taylor
    Science Fiction

    There are books in a person’s life that helps to define their taste in genres. I was lucky enough in my teenage years to work my way through some of the classics of science fiction instilling a lifelong love of the genre. One novel that stands out among the best was Ray Bradbury’s The Illustrated Ma...