Finished "Goldfinger" the other day, and now I take a break from Bond to read "The Writer's Tale" by Russel T Davies & Benjamin Cook.
1632 by Eric Flint (Chapter 7 and it already looks like another winner.)
1632 by Eric Flint (Chapter 7 and it already looks like another winner.)
Oh, my, yes. You can go to Baen's books free library and read 1633.
Then go here for a bunch of the novels that followed as well as copies of the Grantville Gazette:
http://www.crucis.net/ericflint/
I just started A Storm of Swords. Did a double take when I saw the first POV character. Does he actually get some depth, now?
When scientist Michael Shelburne vanishes, his son Adrian—Shel to his friends—suspects unusual circumstances but not that his father has discovered the secret of time travel. Figuring it out, however, Shel and friend David Dryden use Michael’s devices to find the missing man in a quest that takes them through Depression-era Philadelphia, Renaissance Italy, the bloody civil rights march at Selma, and the as-yet-unburned library of Alexandria’s collection of the classical Greek dramatists.
I did a little searching around my collection and finally came up with
Time Travelers Never Die by Jack McDevitt
I like McDevitt, I like time travel... it was a no-brainer.When scientist Michael Shelburne vanishes, his son Adrian—Shel to his friends—suspects unusual circumstances but not that his father has discovered the secret of time travel. Figuring it out, however, Shel and friend David Dryden use Michael’s devices to find the missing man in a quest that takes them through Depression-era Philadelphia, Renaissance Italy, the bloody civil rights march at Selma, and the as-yet-unburned library of Alexandria’s collection of the classical Greek dramatists.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.