Ach, I am confused now. I have Time and Again by Jack Finney on my bookshelf (at home, alas.) Drawing a blank on the plot of it. I have the story you’re both talking about in an anthology, and I also have a radio adaption of it. Googling around a bit confirms that Lok is the one with the functioning memory with regard to the author, and HTB correctly remembers the title. Me, I’m just befuddled.
I am so embarrassed. Is it possible for senile dementia to set in at 32?
I don’t remember the Simak, but the story described is by Piper (th’ kid prevents a murder by removing the firing pin from his dad’s gun). I just re-read it.
IIRC, Time and Again by Finney was the so-so movie “Somewhere in Time” (where a guy goes back in time by immersing himself in an environment of the time he wants to visit. The guy stays in a hotel room from the 1900s(?) ).
Trust me. The one with the miltary guy who goes back in time, ends up in his 14(?) year old self’s body and prevents the murder of a neighbor’s wife is H.Beam Piper.
Don’t worry Larry. I just make it a habit to re-read Piper about once every year or so. So I tend to remember his stuff. I believe Fenris is right about the Finney story.
shrug Well I didn’t say that it was everyone’s favorite book… just that I read it, loved it, and have recommended it to many of my friends, who have also read it and loved it. I’m no big fan of Rushdie’s, but I happen to agree with him here. I think Einstein’s Dreams is one of the finest novels written in the last decade.
I admit I need to go out more, though I don’t see how that bears on my opinion of the books I’ve read. If anything, “getting out more” would just take away from my reading time.
For cryin, out loud!:smack:That’ll teach me to bring up half-remembered stuff. For the record, Fenris is, as usual, absolutely correct. The story is “Time and Time Again” by Piper, copyright 1947, and I have it in the collection The Worlds of H. Beam Piper, Ace, ed. by John R. Carr in 1983.
Simak wrote Time is the Simplest Thing, which of course had nothing to do with time travel.
And while we’re on Piper, Carr also edited the collection Paratime, which neatly gathered the five non-Kalvan Paratime stories. Ace put that one out in 1981.
Ya been whooshed! At the time Einstein’s Dreams was out in hard back, Rushdie was in hiding because of the fatwa against him. So, by saying that he needed to get out more…
The so-so 1980 movie Somewhere in Time about the guy in the hotel is based on the 1975 Richard Matheson novel Bid Time Return (which was later republished as Somewhere In Time title – I suspect for a movie tie-in, but I’m not sure about that.)
Time and Again by Finney is a different book altogether, although the time travel method is similar.
To complicate things further, I vaguely think that Finney is mentioned somewhere in the credits for the so-so Somewhere in Time movie. I believe (again, very vague) that the film script (also by Matheson) elaborated on some of the time travel ideas introduced in Finney’s book. So it was like an homage, so to speak, more than a rip-off. But plot-wise (the plot mostly consists of Christopher Reeve mooning around an old hotel), Somewhere in Time is not at all like anything found in any of Finney’s books.
Armageddon: The Musical by Robert Rankin. The best I can describe it as Scott Addams on crack. I had to read it twice before I truly understood the whole thing. Elvis travelling through time with the help of an over-talkative time sprout and those two characters are the most normal thing about the book.
Oh man! Thinking about it just reminded me about how much of it I forgot. Now I’m going to have to read it again.
The Technicolor Time Machine by Harry Harrison. It’s a fun read concerning a small studio wishing to make an epic motion picture about the discovery of America by the Vikings. What better way to cut costs and gain realism that to film it on location and in the proper time?
I would also cautiously recommend The Time Trip by Rob Swigard. Cautiously, because I haven’t read this book since I was a teenager, and I’m not entirely sure that it would have the same pronounced effect on me as an adult.
I found it in the public library one morning, sat down, and read it cover-to-cover. I couldn’t tear myself away from it long enough to check it out. I still think of that book from time-to-time, and would like to find another copy of it.
The protaganist, dejected after his neglected wife kills herself, turns to hacking to keep himself amused. He stumbles across a database for “Holiday Inn Deathwest”, which, as it happens, turns out to be Hell. He manages to track down his “relocated” wife in ancient Mesopotamia.
If I remember correctly, the time-travel is accomplished through the hedonistic research of an organisation called “Multiple Orgasms for Men”, which is referred to by an unfortunate acronym. I wouldn’t swear to that, though.
CthulhuSpawn’s post reminded me of another story about filming events in the past: Tom Sherrard’s classic “E for Effort.” Man, that was a great story (you can find it in Volume 2B of The Science Fiction Hall of Fame – Greatest Novellettes and Novellas).
And anyone who likes this should hunt up a copy of Keith Laumer’s The Great Time-Machine Hoax wherein a virtual reality computer decides it’s a damnsite easier to just timetravel these picky bastards back to the Jurassic then to do a “holodeck” full-sensory illusion. Very much the same tone as the Harrison.
And Laumer’s The Time Trap is about a time-war. With a giant rutabega. For control of reality. Hysterical stuff.