Time after time A novel

Lisa Grunwald

Book - 2019

"On a clear December morning in 1937, at the famous gold clock in Grand Central Terminal, Joe Reynolds, a hardworking railroad man from Queens, meets a vibrant young woman who seems mysteriously out of place. Nora Lansing is a Manhattan socialite whose flapper clothing, pearl earrings, and talk of the Roaring Twenties don't seem to match the bleak mood of Depression-era New York. Captivated by Nora from her first electric touch, Joe despairs when he tries to walk her home and she disappears. Finding her again--and again--will become the focus of his love and his life. Nora, an aspiring artist and fiercely independent, is shocked to find she's somehow been trapped, her presence in the terminal governed by rules she cannot fath...om. It isn't until she meets Joe that she begins to understand the effect that time is having on her, and the possible connections to the workings of Grand Central and the astrological phenomenon known as Manhattanhenge. As thousands of visitors pass under the famous celestial blue ceiling each day, Joe and Nora create a life unlike any they could have imagined. With infinite love in a finite space, they take full advantage of the "Terminal City" within a city, dining at the Oyster Bar, visiting the Whispering Gallery, and making a home at the Biltmore Hotel. But when the construction of another historic landmark threatens their future, Nora and Joe are forced to test the limits of freedom and love. Delving into Grand Central's rich past, Lisa Grunwald crafts a masterful historical novel about a love affair that defies age, class, place, and even time"--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Fantasy fiction
Published
New York : Random House [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Lisa Grunwald (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
401 pages : illustration ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780812993431
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In Grand Central Station in 1937, railway leverman Joe encounters a woman in 1920s attire named Nora. He offers to walk her home, but she vanishes into thin air once they leave the station. Over the course of several similar meetings, he eventually learns that she died at the station in a train crash in 1925, and her reappearance each December is dependent on her proximity to the site of her death. Despite these limitations, they quickly fall in love, living out of the hotel attached to the terminal to ensure Nora's continued existence. But as Nora remains forever 23 years old while Joe ages, and the onset of World War II increasingly draws Joe's attention away from Nora and towards his family, their dream of marriage begins to seem more and more impossible. While both the central characters and their romance are a bit underdeveloped, depriving Nora and Joe's dilemma of some of its emotional punch, fans of time travel romances like Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler's Wife and Beatriz Williams' Overseas will find much to enjoy.--Martha Waters Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Grunwald (The Irresistible Henry House) delivers a satisfying supernatural romance about lovers brought together across time. In December 1937, Joe Reynolds, a railway worker from Queens, meets an oddly dressed woman in Grand Central Station. Joe thinks Nora, who is dressed like a '20s flapper, looks like she's lost and offers to walk her home. She accepts, but as they approach her wealthy neighborhood, she disappears the moment he turns his back. She reappears each December, and each time vanishes when she strays too far from Grand Central. Eventually, by returning to the address where Nora told him she lives, Joe pieces together that Nora died in 1925, and, with the parameters of her existence set, Nora and Joe try to build a life within the walls of the station, dining at the Oyster Bar and meeting in rooms at the Biltmore Hotel. But as Joe ages and struggles to balance his love for Nora with the needs of his extended family, Nora stays the same age, living free from responsibility. Grunwald uses Grand Central well as a microcosm for exploring the changes to New York and the U.S. between the Depression and WWII, but the love story at the book's heart relies too much on magic, and simmering tensions (such as Joe's controlling nature) remain underdeveloped. Despite this, readers who enjoyed Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler's Wife will be enchanted. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The latest from Grunwald (The Irresistible Henry House) is a World War II-set historical with a sprinkle of magic. It takes place in New York's Grand Central Terminal, where Joe, a leverman who moves the trains, meets Nora, a lovely young woman wearing old-fashioned clothing. After they enjoy a few perfect hours together, Nora simply disappears. Joe determines that Nora was killed years ago in a train crash at Grand Central, and that her yearly appearances occur when the sunlight shines on the city in a special way called Manhattanhenge. Thus starts the story of an ordinary working guy in love with a ghostly woman and how they make their relationship work-and sometimes not work. When his brother Finn goes off to fight in Europe, Joe looks after his wife and their two children. The history of World War II is a big part of the narrative, but Grand Central is a setting as well as a major character, and Grunwald describes its nooks and crannies with detail and delight. VERDICT In the vein of Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler's Wife, this sweetly told tale explores love within restraints such as time, aging, location, and social class divisions.-Beth Gibbs, Davidson, NC © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Grunwald's latest is a quirky ghost story set in Grand Central Station.Joe is a Grand Central leverman, the railway equivalent of an air traffic controller. It is 1937, and Joe, 32, is crossing the Main Concourse when he first encounters Nora. She is coatless although it is winter. Her dress is antiquated and somewhat shabby, particularly for someone who says she lives in the tony Turtle Bay Gardens neighborhood. Flashbacks reveal that Nora, a 23-year-old art student, had just returned from Paris when she was fatally injured in a subway accident. On Dec. 5, 1925, at 7:05 a.m., she died, lying in a pool of sunlight among other crash victims on the marble floor of the Main Concourse. She has been reappearing sporadically since her deathbut only on Dec. 5 at 7:05 a.m. and only if a Manhattanhenge sunrise shines through the east windows. When she ventures too far outside the Grand Central complex, she vanishes. Joe and Nora, who have fallen in love, wonder how to assure her continuous presence. Is there an allowable distance she can stray? In 1941, finagling free rooms in the Biltmore (accessible from inside the terminal), they set up a household of sorts. But then comes Pearl Harbor. Joe's "essential personnel" status keeps him at home, but when his brother, Finn, enlists, Joe shoulders responsibility for Finn's wife and children. The war, and the dawning realization that Nora can never age or live normally while Joe will grow old, puts pressure on the couple. Much of the novel is taken up solving the supernatural logistics, which can be intriguing. Although the history of Grand Central is fascinating in itselfwho knew there was once an art school there?the dimensions of the story are as tightly circumscribed as Nora's material world. Despite the static narrative, rendered more so by the leisurely pace, the characters come alive and make us want them to stay that way. The ending comes as a satisfying surprise.An ingenious and winsome novel. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

1 I KNOW WHERE I WANT TO GO 1937 She wasn't carrying a suitcase, and she wasn't wearing a coat. Those were the things that struck him when he saw her for the first time. It was just a bit after sunrise on a Sunday in early December. Joe was heading across the Main Concourse for Track 13, but there she was--­no bag, no coat--­standing by the west side of the great gold clock, peering into a window of the information booth. If she was traveling, then she was traveling light. If she was working at the terminal, then she was drunk, or she should have known better. No woman who worked at Grand Central would ever go near the guys in the booth at this hour, not at the end of a long night, when their shifts were finally over, and they were probably handing a bottle around. Then one of them must have made a pass, because she stepped back quickly, and he could hear them barking and laughing as she turned to walk away. Joe saw how young she was, and how completely out of place she looked. Why was she here at dawn, and what was she doing without an escort? Still, she didn't seem scared by the guys as much as frustrated, even angry. Her eyes were enormous and bright green, and her lips were the same kind of hard-­candy red as the stoplight on a signal lamp. She stepped away from the stir she'd caused but stopped walking after just a few yards. A tramp standing on the marble staircase cupped a cigarette in his hand, flicked off the ash, and gave her the eye. "Hey, princess," he said. "Can you spare a grand?" Joe hadn't had his coffee yet, but he moved to her side in just a few steps. Her earrings might have been real pearls, and they dangled from glittering, flame-­shaped tops. But "princess"? Joe didn't think so. Her pale-­blue dress was smudged and worn, and her shoes seemed old and scuffed. "You look kind of lost," he said to her. Behind her, the tramp gave Joe the finger. Another guy whistled from inside the booth. "I'm not lost," the girl said. "It's just that--­" "What?" "Those men." "Did you need directions?" Joe asked. "No," she said. "No, I've been here before." "Well, what did you need those guys for, then?" "I was only asking them what happened to the bank on the lower level. One of them said there'd been a little fire, and they all started laughing and saying things like 'Fire down below.' " She looked at the ground, then back at Joe. "Do you think they could be drunk?" "Oh, they could definitely be drunk," Joe said. "How rude." "Want me to go chew them out?" She smiled. "You'd do that?" she asked. She tucked her hair behind her ears and lifted her chin just slightly. Joe realized she wasn't just beautiful. There was something else about her, something vivid and exciting. She made him think of the cats in the tunnels far beneath the concourse: coiled up and waiting, all energy, no telling what they were going to do. By now, the tramp had moved away, and the guys in the booth were leaving too--­disappearing one by one down the booth's hidden corkscrew staircase. "So, you know where you're going?" Joe asked the girl. "I know where I want to go," she said. "And where's that?" "Turtle Bay Gardens." That was the neighborhood near the East River, just blocks from the YMCA where Joe lived but miles beyond him in all other ways. Turtle Bay was a high-­class place with pale, private houses and rich, private people. That meant the pearls were real, Joe thought. But still this young woman seemed happy, even eager, to be talking to him. Standing this close, he could smell her perfume: a blend of talcum and flowers and something sharper, like wood or whiskey. She was two or three inches shorter than he was. Her hair was a jumble of soft copper wires, and it fell at her neck in a cloud of curls. Her cheeks were smooth and pink, the same shade as the terminal's Tennessee marble floors. "So why do you need a bank at this hour?" Joe asked. "I thought they'd caught Ma Barker." She didn't laugh at his joke. She reached into her dress pocket and pulled out a cushion of paper money. The bills weren't green; they looked foreign. "This is all I've got," she said. "I need to get it changed for American dollars." "There's a branch a few blocks away," Joe said. "But I don't think it opens till nine. Where are you coming from, that you don't have cash?" "I do have cash. It's just French cash." "Last I heard, they hadn't laid any tracks under the Atlantic," Joe said. "What train were you on, anyway? And why aren't you wearing a coat?" This time she laughed--­a wonderful, confident laugh, deeper than he would have thought possible for someone who looked so young. But she ignored all his questions. "Anything else you'd like to know, mister?" "Didn't mean to be rude," he said. "You're not!" she exclaimed. "You're being so kind." He told her his name, and he asked for hers. "Nora Lansing," she said, extending her hand, as if he'd asked her to dance. Joe shook it, but hastily let it go. "Your hand's really hot. Do you feel all right?" "I'm fine," she said. Carefully, he took her hand back, cupping it now in both of his, as if it were a butterfly. Its warmth seemed to spread from her hand into his, then traveled the length of his spine, like a current along the railroad tracks. "Nice to meet you, Miss Lansing." "Nora." Nora. It was an old-­fashioned name, and she did seem a little old-­fashioned. Her pale-­blue dress had a black collar, black cuffs, and swirly flat black buttons that looked like rolled-­up licorice wheels. What Joe knew about women's clothing could fit inside an olive, but he knew the dress looked wrong somehow. She leaned in closer to him. "So, Joe, let me ask you this," she said. "Is there any chance you could walk me home?" "To Turtle Bay Gardens? What about the bank?" "Well, I wouldn't need to go there, see, if you could walk me home." Joe looked up at the gold clock and then back at Nora. "I wish I could," he said. "Honestly. But I work here, and I'm late for a meeting, and right after that, I start my shift." The brightness in her eyes dimmed a bit. Joe realized, with some amazement, that he suddenly felt it was his obligation to bring the brightness back. "What if I find a cop to walk you?" he asked. "Oh, you're so nice," Nora said. "But I can do that myself. I should have done it in the first place." By now the Main Concourse was starting to bubble and steam with the morning rush: workers and travelers in seemingly random motion, except for the subtle dance steps that kept them from bumping into each other. No one stopped, unless it was at the clock, the ticket windows, or the blackboard where Bill Keogh stood on a ladder and wrote out the times and track numbers in lemon-­yellow chalk. "Are you sure you're all right?" Joe asked Nora. "I'm sure." She circled her left wrist with her right hand. For just a moment, she looked confused, and he hesitated, reluctant to leave her. Then she said, resolutely: "Go ahead, Joe. You don't want to be late." They walked off in opposite directions, and Joe checked the time as he hurried across the concourse. When he stopped to look back, he was half embarrassed, half thrilled, to see that Nora had done the same thing. Their eyes met the way their hands had: filled with heat and surprise. Finally, Joe turned to leave and, noting the time once more, he started to run. Excerpted from Time after Time: A Novel by Lisa Grunwald All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.