I'm getting lots of great recommendations too!
Not time travel per se, but The Light of Other Days by Stephen Baxter and Arthur C. Clarke is an amazing experience. It postulates a technological ability to view the past, but not interact or travel. The book is a brilliant study of the technology's effect on humankind and society.
I'll second this. It's the rare example of one of Clarke's collaborations with another author that's truly good, too.
Also, if you haven't read Kurt Vonnegut's classic Slaughter-house Five, then you should give it a try. The main character becomes unstuck in time, and is constantly popping back and forth between different points in his life.
Along the same lines, there's also REPLAY by Ken Grimwood, about a guy who keeping living his life over and over, with different results each time . . .
A really good book.
Island in the Sea of Time series, SM Stirling
The Axis of Time, by John Birmingham
The Man Who Folded Himself by David Gerrold.
Mistral, since you seem to be the go-to guy for time travel tales, I need some title/author help:
I read a novella somewhere some years ago about a Los Angeles that experienced "time quakes" that were like earthquakes, but if you were standing on the right fault line when one happened you could travel back in time, emerging on the same LA street/park/whatever but in a different year.
And the narrator was a Private Investigator who would get assignments to ride the time quakes and go back and stop serial killers, convey messages, etc.
The entire thing was a great big literary joke about post-modernism, because it was written in a POMO style about a situation where the distinction between time periods and eras had literally collapsed, instead of just figuratively.
It was FANTASTIC but I can't remember the title or author.
The Man Who Folded Himself by David Gerrold.
After reading it I thought he should have titled it The Man Who F##ked Himself![]()
I just finished A Shortcut In Time by Charles Dickenson.
Very good little tale about a guy who discovers a local walking path has some unusual properties. It's on the quiet end of the time travel spectrum.
I just finished A Shortcut In Time by Charles Dickenson.
Very good little tale about a guy who discovers a local walking path has some unusual properties. It's on the quiet end of the time travel spectrum.
Read this when it came out-a brilliant little tale that was largely overlooked.![]()
L. Sprague de Camp Lest Darkness Fall
Mack Reynolds/Dean Ing Aztec takeoff on Lest Darkness Fall, forgot the name.
H. Beam Piper's Paratime Police stories.
Stephen Baxter's authorized sequel to The Time Machine, The Time Ships.
Chad Oliver The World of Dawn.
Murray Leinster Sideways in Time.
L. Sprague de Camp Lest Darkness Fall
Mack Reynolds/Dean Ing Aztec takeoff on Lest Darkness Fall, forgot the name.
Greg Benford's Timescape qualifies, I think, although strictly it's information that travels in time.
Robert Heinlein's By His Bootstraps and All You Zombies.
Andre Norton's Time Traders series.
Ward Moore's Bring the Jubilee.
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