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Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
418 global ratings
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The Time Travel Chronicles (The Future Chronicles Book 7)

The Time Travel Chronicles (The Future Chronicles Book 7)

bySamuel Peralta
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Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Shay VanZwoll
5.0 out of 5 starsFourteen great stories to take you on a time-travel adventure!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 2, 2015
I've recently become hooked on anthologies, finding the experience of reading connected short stories to be an excited way to learn about new authors and become reacquainted with worlds I already enjoy. The newest addition to my kindle is The Time Travel Chronicles, part of The Future Chronicles. I have enjoyed every one of the Chronicles I have picked up, and this was no exception.

The collection starts out with a bang... or rather, a blink. Extant, by Anthony Vicino, takes us into a world where the gifted can freeze time, race through it, or blink to the past. But not everything is perfect... can knowing that you're saving the world make up for the horrifying consequences? (5 Stars)

Gambit by Rysa Walker is the second book of the collection, and asks the question that everyone wonders: can you safely change the past to make the future your own? And... if you can, should you? When I completed this story, I immediately bought the first 2 books of the author's CHRONOS series, which tells you how much this premise intrigued me. (5 Stars)

Were unicorns supposed to be on Noah's Ark? Beasts of the Earth by Ernie Lindsey answers that question, and more. (4 Stars)

Excess Baggage takes us into a whirlwind of a tale, where a boy is swept away into the past accidentally. The ending of the story leaves so many possibilities open to fuel the imagination, allowing the reader to wonder not only about the fates of the travelers, but also the world left behind. (4 1/2 Stars)

Stefan Bolz's The Traveler made me cry... it's a bittersweet story about loss, and the lengths that someone will go through to say goodbye. (5 Stars)

Eighty-Three is a story with twists and leaps through time, showing us a man who randomly jumps into his past and future, interacting with the world-to-be, or that left behind. But it is true, or just a delusion? (4 1/2 Stars)

Everyone dreams of living forever... or to somehow jump into a better future. But what if the future isn't what you imagined it would be? Though I had a premonition of what the ending of Life/Time in the New World would be, it was so well-written and had such an edge of truth to it that I can confidently say that it was one of my favorites in the collection. (5 Stars)

I've been a fan of Robert J. Sawyer's work since I picked up his WWW Trilogy a few years back, so I wasn't surprised that I enjoyed his short story, Just Like Old Times. This was a fun tale about an alternate death sentence, leaving us to wonder if the past could change the present. (4 1/2 Stars)

Shades is the tale of a boy who can't stay still.. but not by his own choice. Every five years, since his birth, all proof of his existence is wiped clean and he finds himself ten years in the future, with no past, no family, and no hope of a normal life. Can he find the courage to take control back? (4 1/2 Stars)

The smell of blood on the beach foretells a day of horror, when humanity will go back to try to change the past. The Nothing Gate is a morbid tale that leaves you to wonder about the fate of both the main character and the world itself. (4 1/2 Stars)

Meddler by Ernie Luis is another favorite... when you combine a drug dealer with a conscious with time travel, nothing could possibly go wrong, right? I look forward to looking into more books by this author! (5 Stars)

I'm still trying to figure out my feelings toward The Diatomic Quantum Flop. This is a story that will leave you thinking about the possibilities hidden within the human mind while simultaneously wondering what happens next. While I enjoyed this tale, it was a little chaotic to be a favorite of mine, but was still an excellent and intriguing tale. (4 Stars)

Red Mustang is a standout piece in a collection full of stories that shine. What happens if an action of yours not only ruined your life, but the lives of those around you? If you could go back to that moment and relive your life, knowing that you do now, would you? (5 Stars)

Hereafter by Samuel Peralta is a perfect story to close out the anthology, drawing us into a family tied together by time travel. Not only is the timing of the travel clearly thought out, but the impact on the people involved is so well described that this story made me cry as well... not once, but twice. This author will play with your heartstrings while making you wonder about what the future holds. (5 Stars)

At the end of this collection, I'm left with fourteen outstanding tales, and nothing that I would rate less than four stars. I am very happy that I was given an opportunity to read this book, and I look forward to reading more by all of these authors in the future.

While I received an Advance Reader Copy of this book for review purposes, I have also purchased the anthology because I loved it so much.
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7 people found this helpful

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Reinold F.
2.0 out of 5 starsTime to be lectured :T
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 14, 2022
Among the stories the one I liked was 'Just Like Old Times,' in which the author genuinely is having fun and it shows in the entertaining storytelling, you won't see dinosaurs the same way. Some of the rest are forgettable stories, which is natural because is a very difficult topic, is too easy to fall in a deus ex machina or to tell what has already been told.
Nevertheless I disliked the longest story: 'Eighty-Three', for another reason: the plot is about a man with a gift to send his consciousness to travel through different times of his life; he uses that gift not to improve or help humanity or at least his city block, but to teach himself to be a third wave feminist gentleman... Which means that he forces himself to delete his feelings and treat women as if they were made of paper tissue with no agency to do do anything by themselves; while voicing how important and strong and better than him they are automatically by the sole virtue of being women, whose opportunities for success or the losses in their existence is blamed on him. He is interested in cinema and he is hired into one of the worst movies ever (to my subjective and personal tastes which I don't force others to share), 'The Last Jedi!!!' if you liked it then certainly you are the reader this book is looking for. In some moment the weak character will take a package of kleenex >_> and finally he does what he is supposed to do: use the fame and fortune he got by doing horrible movies to take a step aside and let his wife to take the central spot as a creative superior to himself; as if she couldn't decide to start her career by herself and she couldn't create her own fame. I think the author, in his fear to represent women as valuable persons, ends portraying them as caricatures.
Most of the other stories are just parables with the same goal; you apply identity politics and you know who is the bad guy. In Gambit for example the mistake of the lady is to get in love with the main character, a man; otherwise she would be quite good and the villain wouldn't accomplish his goals by himself. In 'The Nothing Gate' humanity gets punished because global warming and feelings anti-migration, so you know, you are evil if you help the environment but don't give your money to programs which seem to be absorbed more in salaries and making up new issues than actually being more efficient in the protection of environment; or that having a functional border with legal entry is unacceptable. And so on, I think the culprit is the editor, which turned a genre that is meant to be adventure, literary skill and excitement into another cage to catch you into the world of fictional communities with fictional issues that colleges and universities call "the real world," one that only seems to exist in tweets.
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From the United States

Shay VanZwoll
5.0 out of 5 stars Fourteen great stories to take you on a time-travel adventure!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 2, 2015
Verified Purchase
I've recently become hooked on anthologies, finding the experience of reading connected short stories to be an excited way to learn about new authors and become reacquainted with worlds I already enjoy. The newest addition to my kindle is The Time Travel Chronicles, part of The Future Chronicles. I have enjoyed every one of the Chronicles I have picked up, and this was no exception.

The collection starts out with a bang... or rather, a blink. Extant, by Anthony Vicino, takes us into a world where the gifted can freeze time, race through it, or blink to the past. But not everything is perfect... can knowing that you're saving the world make up for the horrifying consequences? (5 Stars)

Gambit by Rysa Walker is the second book of the collection, and asks the question that everyone wonders: can you safely change the past to make the future your own? And... if you can, should you? When I completed this story, I immediately bought the first 2 books of the author's CHRONOS series, which tells you how much this premise intrigued me. (5 Stars)

Were unicorns supposed to be on Noah's Ark? Beasts of the Earth by Ernie Lindsey answers that question, and more. (4 Stars)

Excess Baggage takes us into a whirlwind of a tale, where a boy is swept away into the past accidentally. The ending of the story leaves so many possibilities open to fuel the imagination, allowing the reader to wonder not only about the fates of the travelers, but also the world left behind. (4 1/2 Stars)

Stefan Bolz's The Traveler made me cry... it's a bittersweet story about loss, and the lengths that someone will go through to say goodbye. (5 Stars)

Eighty-Three is a story with twists and leaps through time, showing us a man who randomly jumps into his past and future, interacting with the world-to-be, or that left behind. But it is true, or just a delusion? (4 1/2 Stars)

Everyone dreams of living forever... or to somehow jump into a better future. But what if the future isn't what you imagined it would be? Though I had a premonition of what the ending of Life/Time in the New World would be, it was so well-written and had such an edge of truth to it that I can confidently say that it was one of my favorites in the collection. (5 Stars)

I've been a fan of Robert J. Sawyer's work since I picked up his WWW Trilogy a few years back, so I wasn't surprised that I enjoyed his short story, Just Like Old Times. This was a fun tale about an alternate death sentence, leaving us to wonder if the past could change the present. (4 1/2 Stars)

Shades is the tale of a boy who can't stay still.. but not by his own choice. Every five years, since his birth, all proof of his existence is wiped clean and he finds himself ten years in the future, with no past, no family, and no hope of a normal life. Can he find the courage to take control back? (4 1/2 Stars)

The smell of blood on the beach foretells a day of horror, when humanity will go back to try to change the past. The Nothing Gate is a morbid tale that leaves you to wonder about the fate of both the main character and the world itself. (4 1/2 Stars)

Meddler by Ernie Luis is another favorite... when you combine a drug dealer with a conscious with time travel, nothing could possibly go wrong, right? I look forward to looking into more books by this author! (5 Stars)

I'm still trying to figure out my feelings toward The Diatomic Quantum Flop. This is a story that will leave you thinking about the possibilities hidden within the human mind while simultaneously wondering what happens next. While I enjoyed this tale, it was a little chaotic to be a favorite of mine, but was still an excellent and intriguing tale. (4 Stars)

Red Mustang is a standout piece in a collection full of stories that shine. What happens if an action of yours not only ruined your life, but the lives of those around you? If you could go back to that moment and relive your life, knowing that you do now, would you? (5 Stars)

Hereafter by Samuel Peralta is a perfect story to close out the anthology, drawing us into a family tied together by time travel. Not only is the timing of the travel clearly thought out, but the impact on the people involved is so well described that this story made me cry as well... not once, but twice. This author will play with your heartstrings while making you wonder about what the future holds. (5 Stars)

At the end of this collection, I'm left with fourteen outstanding tales, and nothing that I would rate less than four stars. I am very happy that I was given an opportunity to read this book, and I look forward to reading more by all of these authors in the future.

While I received an Advance Reader Copy of this book for review purposes, I have also purchased the anthology because I loved it so much.
7 people found this helpful
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Reinold F.
2.0 out of 5 stars Time to be lectured :T
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on August 14, 2022
Verified Purchase
Among the stories the one I liked was 'Just Like Old Times,' in which the author genuinely is having fun and it shows in the entertaining storytelling, you won't see dinosaurs the same way. Some of the rest are forgettable stories, which is natural because is a very difficult topic, is too easy to fall in a deus ex machina or to tell what has already been told.
Nevertheless I disliked the longest story: 'Eighty-Three', for another reason: the plot is about a man with a gift to send his consciousness to travel through different times of his life; he uses that gift not to improve or help humanity or at least his city block, but to teach himself to be a third wave feminist gentleman... Which means that he forces himself to delete his feelings and treat women as if they were made of paper tissue with no agency to do do anything by themselves; while voicing how important and strong and better than him they are automatically by the sole virtue of being women, whose opportunities for success or the losses in their existence is blamed on him. He is interested in cinema and he is hired into one of the worst movies ever (to my subjective and personal tastes which I don't force others to share), 'The Last Jedi!!!' if you liked it then certainly you are the reader this book is looking for. In some moment the weak character will take a package of kleenex >_> and finally he does what he is supposed to do: use the fame and fortune he got by doing horrible movies to take a step aside and let his wife to take the central spot as a creative superior to himself; as if she couldn't decide to start her career by herself and she couldn't create her own fame. I think the author, in his fear to represent women as valuable persons, ends portraying them as caricatures.
Most of the other stories are just parables with the same goal; you apply identity politics and you know who is the bad guy. In Gambit for example the mistake of the lady is to get in love with the main character, a man; otherwise she would be quite good and the villain wouldn't accomplish his goals by himself. In 'The Nothing Gate' humanity gets punished because global warming and feelings anti-migration, so you know, you are evil if you help the environment but don't give your money to programs which seem to be absorbed more in salaries and making up new issues than actually being more efficient in the protection of environment; or that having a functional border with legal entry is unacceptable. And so on, I think the culprit is the editor, which turned a genre that is meant to be adventure, literary skill and excitement into another cage to catch you into the world of fictional communities with fictional issues that colleges and universities call "the real world," one that only seems to exist in tweets.
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W. Swardstrom
5.0 out of 5 stars No Regrets on this Read
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 2, 2015
Verified Purchase
Regrets.

We all have them. Ultimately we have to find a way to deal with our regrets and we all have our own particular methods to accept or reject what we could have done differently in our lives. To this day, I still look back on moments in my life and ask, โ€œwhat if I hadnโ€™t done that?โ€ or โ€œwhat if I had done the other thing?โ€

When I read time travel stories, I canโ€™t help but think that many of them also have a firm basis in the pool of regrets. The idea that we can somehow go back and alter our past, to change the part of ourselves that we find the most offensive -- the most unlike ourselves.

When I read the latest of Samuel Peraltaโ€™s Future Chronicles series -- The Time Travel Chronicles -- I found myself reliving parts of my own past. In a way, this book acted as a vehicle to my own regrets and made me reevaluate my own life.
Each of the stories was engaging and intriguing, but a few in particular made me really appreciate this collection.

First off, the anthology starts off with a bang with the excellent Extent by Anthony Vicino. In Vicinoโ€™s creation, the past can be altered -- as long as you donโ€™t go back any farther than 32 seconds. Those who can use time as a tool have different and varied abilities to travel through and use time. Vicino uses those various abilities to enrich his characters and make a strong story through alternating time viewpoints where we can piece together the truth by the time the climax comes.

I have been a fan of Stefan Bolz for a long time, so it would be easy for me to rave about his story, but to be honest, I really appreciated his story The Traveler. When we get time travel stories, we donโ€™t often see the work that goes into the journey through time. Our heroine has to work for her payoff and we as the audience see the pain and growth through her eyes by the time she completes (or even begins) her journey.
Daniel Arthur Smithโ€™s Diatomic Quantum Flop is a trippy dippy tumble through time. Itโ€™s a take on time travel that puts us in the shoes of someone, no one, and everyone all at the same time. In Doctor Who, time is referred to as a big ball of wibbly-wobbly...timey-wimey... stuff. Take that and a healthy dose of psychotropic drugs and you have Smithโ€™s story. Great stuff...I think.

But I would say that probably the story that really stuck with me was Eric Wecksโ€™ Eighty-Three. Wow. The idea that time travel exists but that you inhabit your future or past self for a limited amount of time is genius. What he does with that idea is even better. Our hero, Noah, isnโ€™t always a great guy, but by the end of the story, I was rooting for him and cheered at times. Cheered. Out loud. I was truly happy for the great things that happened and for the route the story took. I couldnโ€™t help loving this story and the way he took the simple bits of unknown life and made them known, but unpredictable at the same time.

Once again, Peralta has put together a killer collection. I love each and every Future Chronicles anthology and eagerly await the release of the new books each month or so. I was given an advanced reader copy for an honest review, but as you can tell, the review was well-earned. I found all the stories to be well-worth the early purchase price, and definitely will stand the test of time as well.
11 people found this helpful
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Peter Pauze
3.0 out of 5 stars This may not be what youโ€™re expecting.
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 24, 2015
Verified Purchase
Let me start by saying that the writing in these stories is consistently solid, often very good, and occasionally exceptional. No complaints there.

But just so you know what to expect...

No less than five of the stories feature a protagonist who is a troubled child or a troubled teen who is dealing with estrangement from and/or the death of a parent. (And a sixth story is about a troubled couple dealing with their estrangement after the death of their child.) Fans of troubled youth and relationship estrangement stories will find much to please them.

In several of the stories any actual time travel happens at the very end of the story, often on the last page. You get to decide if that counts as a time travel story.

One of the stories is primarily an alternate universe story and only kinda sorta incidentally a time travel story. I love alternate universe stories. But y'know... theyโ€™re not time travel stories.

One of the stories is a โ€œthis guy wakes up after being in suspended animation for 200 yearsโ€ story. You get to decide if that tried-and-true premise counts as a time travel story.

One of the stories is a flat-out fantasy about changing a mistake from your past. Not that thereโ€™s anything wrong with flat-out fantasies. Some of my best friends are fantasies. My sister married a fantasy. And this story is a beautifully-written fantasy. But just so you know, it is not remotely science fiction.

As others have noted, many of the stories do not have endings, they just stop. They read like the first chapter of a longer work. Mostly the authors admit this, and some authors sort of apologize for it, and some promise to continue the story in some future publication. Which is all nice. But still, many of the stories leave you hanging without anything approaching a resolution.

The majority of the stories feel like they are only incidentally a time travel story, like they are primarily a troubled-youth-coming-of-age story or a lost-love-romance story or some other kind of story that sort of incidentally happens within the context of time travel.

Only a few of the stories make any attempt at all to present a scientifically plausible explanation for the time travel they depict; in the majority of the stories it just happens, like magic. Does this make them fantasy stories? I dunno, letโ€™s not open that can of worms. But I will say that most of the stories in this anthology feel (to me) more like fantasy than science fiction. (Not that thatโ€™s a bad thing. Some of my best friends, honest, and my sister is very happy.)

Mostly... just so you know... not one of the fourteen stories is what you might call a traditional science fiction time travel story. You know, the kind of story where some clever person devises a method of traveling through time and goes on some sort of time travel adventure either causing problems with the timeline or solving problems with the timeline and generally doing traditional time travel story kind of time travel stuff. Not one. Well, maybe one. Kinda. Itโ€™s an interesting setup. But then, guess what... it just stops.

Now maybe this is all good. Maybe this is what makes this anthology special. Different. Not your fatherโ€™s time travel story. Maybe that makes it better.

But you should know... it might not be what youโ€™re expecting.
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JTF
4.0 out of 5 stars Diverse Perspectives on Time
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on November 6, 2015
Verified Purchase
[NOTE - Current review for Gambit & Hereafter - more to come]

In diving into The Time Travel Chronicles, I dive into a long tradition of Science Fiction / Alternate History stories on time travel. Iโ€™ve only started into the book with Gambit and Hereafter. This is a great anthology of a different perspectives, temperaments, and storylines all examining time travel. The first I read (second in the book) is from the perspective of a historian (how cool would it be to do first-hand research; not just original sources depicting the even, but the even itself.) and the other is from a scientist. Both have the descriptive detail and moving narrative arc of a storyteller.

While Iโ€™ve yet to read the rest of the anthology, and I will be updating this post as I do, these two stories are indicative of how differently a theme can be handled. Different isnโ€™t bad. I love the diverse, but good perspectives both elicit. I anticipate the remaining stories to be equally diverse and well done.

Kudos to Crystal Watanabe for editing such a great anthology and all the authors for bringing their inner worlds to life for us on such a fun and provocative topic.

For full review: http://wp.me/p2XCwQ-1ho
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Derek Atkins
VINE VOICE
4.0 out of 5 stars A Good Collection of Time Travel Stories
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on December 7, 2019
Verified Purchase
During the past few years, I've had a growing interest in time travel stories, so I decided to buy this anthology of stories. These stories are quite well-written, and I enjoyed reading most of them. The only reason why I'm giving this book four stars instead of five is because some of the stories are about unsavory characters and unsavory lifestyles, such as drug users, drug dealers, and criminals. I know that the real world contains these elements, but I do feel that the best literature should encourage us to pursue that which is good, noble, and worthwhile in life. Otherwise, a very good collection of stories!
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Mojambo
4.0 out of 5 stars GREAT collection of short stories!
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on February 16, 2016
Verified Purchase
In this era of self-publishing, when every soccer mom honestly believes she can pen the next Harry Potter series in a free afternoon, it's nothing short of a miracle to come across a collection of stories this well written. The time travel theme has been done to death, but this collection somehow manages to discover a few previously undiscovered nooks and crannies and shine some light into them. The stories are fun, thoughtful and fresh. And blessedly typo-free! (Thank you, Jesus!)

I've not heard of most of the authors included in this volume, but you can bet I will be seeking out their writing in the future. There's not one of them here that I wouldn't love to hear more from. If you demand more from your reading experience than just scanning random words on paper, this is the collection for you! This is definitely one I'll want to re-read in a year or so. Chances are, you will, too.
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Bert Springwell
4.0 out of 5 stars A diverse collection
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on April 30, 2016
Verified Purchase
This anthology covers a plethora of tones. Some stories are heartwarming, others are action-adventure. A couple are noir. Many are thought-provoking. "The Traveler" is the brightest gem of the anthology,but "Eighty-Three" and "Shades" are my favorites too, as is "Hereafter," a nice conclusion to collection. Some stories didn't really work for me ("The Nothing Gate" and "Meddler") and a couple are more magical than science fiction ("Beast of the Earth" and "Red Mustang"--but both are good, old-school 'Twilight Zone'-ish tales).

"Gambit" is part of a bigger series and doesn't really feel like a proper short story on its own, though it's still an interesting read. "Shades" is like a pilot episode, like a set up for a big story arc. I love its premise and hope Lucas Bale expands on it.

Anyway, I highly recommend this. Now I'm working my way through 
The Future Chronicles - Special Edition
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Dwayne Lee Marshall
5.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on October 16, 2020
Verified Purchase
I C U sitting there on your tablet,phone,computer,or other device contemplating weither or not to buy this book. I can tell you with certainty that you do buy it and love it. You also buy it and don't like it ,and you don't buy it at all. All of these happen along with other possibilities too numerous to mention. Enjoy the ride.
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brujaja
4.0 out of 5 stars a distinctive bunch of works
Reviewed in the United States ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ on March 9, 2017
Verified Purchase
I don't know exactly how to feel about this book. I should start off by saying that the stories were all *very* innovative and well-written. There were more unique takes on this topic than I've ever seen all together in one place. There wasn't a trite, predictable time-travel story in the lot. The only thing is, the book also has a pervasive melancholy, with death and loss being a pervasive theme. Nothing wrong with that; just not quite the thing if you're looking for something to buoy your spirits. However, they really are a distinctive bunch of works of high quality.
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