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In a society where images
of the past can be viewed exactly as they happen, one man tests a radical
theory that the past can be entered and changed, bringing two worlds
into collision that threaten to destroy the fabric of space and time. |
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In the sequel to Timeshift,
Tobias Raikhel succeeds in opening a window in time that brings two
civil war soldiers from 1863 five hundred years into the future, with
potentially disastrous consequences for both worlds. |
Book 2:
Between Two Worlds
PAUL THORNDYKE, AGE 45,
now controls the time viewing process. His life-long friend Quentin
Cottle persuades him to test the radical theory that the past can be
entered and changed.
Cottle wants to go back
in time and destroy the deadly ash that plagues humanity before it has
a chance to spread. When Cottle is accidentally lost in the past, all
memory of him in the future instantly vanishes. Thorndyke feels a great
loss, but cannot understand why. As memory of Cottle changes, so too
does the history that involved him. Relations between the Subterranean
and the surface worldalready strained in Cottle's realityare
worse in the new timeline. There is a legitimate threat of civil war
that Thorndyke must find a way to stop.
Tobias Raikhel also believes
the past can be entered and changed. In an unauthorized jump he decides
to test his theory by bringing an 1863 Civil War soldier who is about
to die into the future. The experiment goes terribly wrong, and several
soldiers are brought into the 25th century through a rip in time.
As Thorndyke struggles to
keep tensions in the Subterranean from exploding, he must also deal
with the emerging crisis caused by Raikhel's unauthorized experiment.
The cascading effect of an unintended rip in time threatens to destroy
the domed city of Washington D.C.
On Sale Now
ISBN 1-58851-438-2