Ratings5
Average rating3.2
Shel and his friend Dave journey through time in search of Shel's missing physicist-father, but make a devastating discovery that changes their lives forever when Shel violates their agreement not to visit the future.
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I have been an avid fan of Jack McDevitt since reading Omega years ago. I have been in love with his work, particularly the Alex Benedict/Chase Kolpath novels. Very few of his books have disappointed me (Ancient Shores and Eternity Road being my least favorite). Time Travelers Never Die is one of his latest, and actually is one that I don't plan on reading again. It is a fascinating, fictional look at some historic events and figures. That aspect is well done. However, there was little tension in the events. The ability to instantly jump out of whatever situation the characters were in hindered the building of meaningful tension and conflict. I also found that the novel didn't really address the idea of the paradoxes of time travel satisfactorily. Enjoyable and worth reading, but only once. Not one I will go back to again.
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Two guys and their time machine.
This a generally enjoyable book, but on the whole it is lackluster and comes across as a series of ad hoc time-fillers rather than a novel.
Adrian “Shel” Shelborne's father disappears and Adrian inherits some handy, extremely portable time machines. Shel goes in search of his father throughout time, enlisting his friend Dave Dryden, who speaks Latin and Greek. They start learning the rules of time-travel, which includes avoiding the creation of paradoxes on pain of death. Ultimately, they start using the time-machines to play tourist in the past and the near future. Difficulties ensue at various times, which require some intricate perambulations with their time-machines. The great figures of the past are modern and big-hearted and tolerant, unless they are identified as Catholics, in which case they are intolerant and threatening. (Galileo and Michealangelo may be Catholic, but they aren't identified as such.)
In short, the book was a generally entertaining time-waster. It really didn't have any big ideas. The whole thing seemed to be generated from the author's wish-fulfillment fantasy of what he would do if he had a time-machine.
Your mileage may differ.
PSB