Time Travel Book Reviews

Briggits Norseff

Junior Member
Messages
64
I know that I posted photographs of the device on several sites so they may still be out there. My watch would stop - which make sense but sometimes the next day after spending the night in the field my watch would show an earlier time than when I placed it into the ZTG. Simply the metal reacting to the crazy moving electromagnetic fields? Probably.
You should try that with a digital Device or a phone.....etc
 

Briggits Norseff

Junior Member
Messages
64
Well done Cousin Steve for reminding us that this is a time travel book review...As usual i will strongly suggest to members or lurkers to purchase the book that first started off a major interest/investigation into time-travel, "The Philadelphia Experiment", written by Charles Berlitz and William Moore...

The book is obtainable from Amazon and Ebay, and is very very inexpensive...It was the first book ever to research the mysteries surrounding the Philadelphia Experiment in 1943 when an American destroyer escort ship the Eldridge DE-173, vanished completely from view both visual and radar tracking..
 

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steven chiverton

Senior Member
Messages
3,950
if you used a hdr and got stuck in a time loop explain in great details how you set your hdr and what you said and did and what effects it created before the event
 

white_rabbit

New Member
Messages
11
1Q84 by Haruki Murakami

A gorgeous, understated, fascinating novel about the malleability of reality, connection, destiny, and human faults... in its our protagonists Aomame and Tengo unwittingly end up in an altered timeline where police carry different guns and there are two moons... and a vengeful team of "Little People" seek to alter reality for their own ends. Masterful prose unwinds a captivating tale about the patterns that we move in in the world, the interconnectedness of everything, and the necessity (or not) of brutality... all with an ambiguous element regarding the surreal where the ending could be as dark or as hopeful as the reader chooses. But if I choose hope, am I really just closing my eyes to the darkness?

I highly recommend these 3 books (collected in 1 volume) to anyone with an interest in the multiverse or what the consequences of time travel might realistically look like.

On deck: 11/22/63 by Stephen King. Funny how books like these like to use numbers in their title, huh?

I also read The Paradox Hotel by Rob Hart, which I found unimpressive and pulp-y, This is How You Lose the Time War, which had the opposite problem and read more like poetry than anything, and The 22 Murders of Madison May by Max Barry, which is also a little more multiverse-y than time travel, but I think they have a lot in common. It introduced a really cool worldbuilding piece about "anchors" where different artifacts that you take with you while traveling can help things remain consistent across changing timelines.

I read these books while doing research for my own novel, found here. It is written in the 2nd person in the choose-your-own-adventure style to simulate short term time travel based on changing choices. It contains 23 illustrations.

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