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6 oeuvres 241 utilisateurs 12 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de K. A. Bedford

Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait (2008) 121 exemplaires
Hydrogen Steel (2006) 38 exemplaires
Orbital Burn (2003) 29 exemplaires
Eclipse (1680) 27 exemplaires
Black Light (2015) 10 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
Australia

Membres

Critiques

I really enjoyed the first third of this novel, and found the second third interesting, but by the last third I was annoyed by time travel (this is normal, though it usually happens faster, so credit to the writer) and am pleased with myself both for reaching the end, and finding it mostly satisfactory. There is one glaring error which I made note of in the quotes, and many cogent observations, and though I won't be reading more in the series, I don't regret reading this one.
 
Signalé
terriaminute | 5 autres critiques | Dec 4, 2022 |
Spider Webb. The protagonist. You already know what you need to know to judge if this piece of Antipodean amusement is going to work for you: If you laughed or smiled at the name, go get you one.

What do you get when you make time travel available to the masses? Another bureaucracy, a lot of criminals-by-definition instead of by facts of behavioral pattern, and further income inequality. Wait, WHAT?! Yes, oligarchy can use anything to pursue its aims of economic royalism.

Cheap on the Kindle, worth what I paid, and certainly enough fun to break even in the time-invested versus amusement-returned equation.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
richardderus | 5 autres critiques | Jan 21, 2021 |
Fun journey through a mixture of genres, the emphasis more on the journey than the alternative worlds the journeyers pass through. A nice play on the contradictions of time travel, a good whodunit plot, what's not to like? June 2020
 
Signalé
alanca | 5 autres critiques | Jul 29, 2020 |
This is the second novel about Aloysius "Spider" Webb, your average individual just trying to get through the day. Of course, it is not that easy.

A former member of the Western Australia Police, Webb was forced out because he became a whistleblower. In a world where time machines are cheap and portable, Webb is eking out a living as a time machine repairman. Most of his business is cause by people who are too impatient, or too stupid, to read the directions.

Things get weird when, one day, in the breakroom refrigerator, Webb finds the severed head of his much-disliked ex-boss, Dickhead McMahon. Iris Street, the local Police Inspector who deals with time travel matters, and who hates time travel as much as Webb, is called in. Footage from the surveillance camera shows no sign of any intruders.

Meantime, Mr. Patel, Webb's new boss, has a huge problem. His young son, Vijay, and Phoebe, a neighbor's child, have taken Mr. Patel's very tricked-out, and very illegal time machine, and disappeared. There is no time machine equivalent of a GPS system, so they could have gone to the distant past or future. Patel asks for Webb's help in finding them.

Webb hears of a concentration camp for time travellers in the far future. Using Patel's other time machine, a working, exact copy of the machine used in the 1960 film, Webb and Street take a trip to the far future. Do they find Vijay and Phoebe? So they stop the destruction of the universe? Do they survive?

This is a fine piece of writing from start to finish. It does a really good job exploring the societal impact of a huge technology like personal time travel. Things might get a little convoluted toward the end, but this is still highly recommended.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
plappen | Aug 14, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
6
Membres
241
Popularité
#94,248
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
12
ISBN
19

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