Ratings10
Average rating3.8
When Time and Again was published in 1970, it immediately developed a loyal following. Now, twenty-five years later, Jack Finney returns to the same magical territory and finds Ruben Prien still at work with the Project, still dreaming of altering man's fate by going back in time to adjust events...to interfere, some might say, with destiny.
Once again, his conduit to that bygone era, his messenger to that lost world, is Simon Morley, the man who actually proved himself capable of traveling back and forth in time. In From Time to Time, Rube's purpose in summoning Si back from that earlier world, where he has taken up permanent residence, is no less grand than an attempt to prevent World War I from erupting.
Featured Series
3 primary booksTime is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 1970 with contributions by Jack Finney and Nancy Campbell Allen.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book might interest a historian - someone who wants long descriptions of New York City in the very early 1900's. The actual story line is pretty short, if you could subtract all the flowery prose.
The beginning and the end of this book were great!
But in the middle, the protagonist mostly ignores the overarching plotlines in order to wander around in 1912 NYC and basically show us a slideshow of his vacation.
In the first book, it was kind of charming, because it was interwoven with (and helped advance) the plot, but in this one it was frustrating because it was literally the protagonist going sightseeing instead of trying to complete his mission?
Also, McGuffin complaint: I absolutely refuse to believe any New Yorker would have not immediately thought of the Flatiron building. I did. He did not need a plane ride for that.His refusal to let Helen have an actual name for the whole book disproportionately annoyed me, too. I mean, plus the mild cheating on his wife, but okay, whatever. But like. WHY can't you just call her by her name??The coincidences of him always just running into people got to be a little much, whether famous people or plot points. He just always needed to meander around and the right stuff would happen to him.Tessie and Ted was built up into this huge thing and then was really anticlimactic.I'm mad that nothing really came of all the mysteries and weird artifacts from the first chapter. But the final chapter was incredible.
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