The Best Time Travel Stories of the 20th Century : Stories by Arthur C. Clarke, Jack Finney, Joe Haldeman, Ursula K. Le Guin,


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1 Damning omission
The absence of Bester's "The Men Who Murdered Mohammed" is alone enough to invalidate the title.
2 Forwardback to Yestermorrow
A compilation such as this proves that a genre can be difficult to define, and that talented writers can explore what appears to be a simple theme in myriad unexpected fashions. That's what makes this compendium of classic time travel stories such fun to read. Most of the short stories here, spanning from the 1940s to the 1990s, examine the personal or social ramifications of traveling through time and messing things up, and this strong focus can be attributed to editors Turtledove and Greenburg. The archetypal masterpiece about how even slightly altering the past can screw up the present, Ray Bradbury's awesome "A Sound of Thunder," is included here. That's the story from which most modern time travel literature springs, and it's also the source of the celebrated butterfly effect, though Bradbury didn't use that exact term. Other influential early classics such as "Time's Arrow" by Arthur C. Clarke and "A Gun for Dinosaur" by L. Sprague de Camp are also included. For the later stories, there are a few missteps, like the Vietnam obsession of Joe Haldeman's "Anniversary Project," and the heavy-handed gender politics of Ursula K. Leguin's "Another Story or The Fisherman of the Inland Sea." But most of the rest of the collection is perfectly enjoyable, with winners like Poul Anderson's "The Man Who Came Early," which illustrates how a modern American would be both unbearably obnoxious and pathetically helpless in medieval times, and R.A. Lafferty's "Rainbird" in which an inventor can't stop going back in time to set his younger self on a different path, with outlandish results. Remember - if you ever travel through time, don't change anything! [~doomsdayer520~]

Sunday, 06-Jul-2008 21:12:01 CDT
Quote of the Day:


It's very inconvenient to be mortal -- you never know when everything may

suddenly stop happening.

Q: Why is Poland just like the United States?
A: In the United States you can't buy anything for zlotys and in
Poland you can't either, while in the U.S. you can get whatever
you want for dollars, just as you can in Poland.
-- being told in Poland, 1987