The rhythm of time

Questlove

Book - 2023

After accidentally traveling back in time and rewriting the future, twelve-year-old best friends Rahim and Kasia must work together to restore their timeline.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Time-travel fiction
Published
New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Questlove (author)
Other Authors
S. A. Cosby (author)
Physical Description
236 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 10+.
Grades 4-6.
ISBN
9780593354063
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Musician Questlove and author Cosby collaborate on a speculative adventure steeped with 1990s references and time-travel logistics. In contemporary Philly, hip-hop enthusiast Rahim Reynolds, a seventh grader, yearns to become a famous rapper, but his history professor father's anti-technology stance stands in the way of his laying down or uploading tracks. His homeschooled best friend Kasia Collins, meanwhile, lives in a wildly automated household next door, and is a gifted builder and hacker in her own right. When Kasia gives Rahim a vintage-style phone that she's created--and routed through several top-secret government satellites--using it teleports Rahim back to June 1997, three years before his long-disbanded favorite band, Four the Hard Way, broke up. As Kasia works to bring Rahim back to their present, attempting to stay a step ahead of government agents, Rahim ignores her warnings to avoid interactions in 1997, befriending his father as a young man and imperiling his timeline--and the future. Layering references to popular culture with speculative surrealism, the creators conjure an engaging love letter to the '90s that gives way to a heartwarming story of love and support. Characters read as Black. Final art not seen by PW. Ages 10--up. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this entertaining novel centering Black tweens by noted musician and filmmaker Questlove and bestselling author Cosby, the gift of a supersmart phone is a godsend…until it's very much not. Philadelphia seventh grader Rahim Reynolds wants to be a rapper like Four the Hard Way, his favorite '90s group, but if he's not getting bullied at school, his history professor father's strict anti-tech, all-books policies make things hard at home. Bestie and home-schooled neighbor Kasia Collins, in contrast, lives in a tech-filled wonderland and is the genius behind most of her home's innovations. A space-time traveling phone that uses secret government satellites is just the latest invention she tests on her occasional guinea pig, Rahim. When he accidentally dials himself into 1997, Kasia never doubts her ability to get him back, but time is very literally working against them as Rahim disregards her warnings and interferes with almost everything. He quickly befriends his preteen father, sneaks into a Four the Hard Way concert, changes familial and global history, and causes a wormhole that wreaks havoc. Kasia, meanwhile, must deal with government agents and two sets of worried parents while figuring out how to get Rahim home. A semisuccessful return to the present quickly reminds Rahim of how good he had it before. The conclusion of this charming collaboration sets the stage for larger stakes in future adventures. Art not seen. Time-travel hijinks and '90s rap references abound in a fun and funny series starter. (Science fiction. 10-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

When he got home, Rahim saw a note from his mother and father saying they were out getting groceries. He slammed the door and stomped up to his room. Harris was right. Even if his dad thought having easy access to a computer was going to rot his brain, that didn't mean he couldn't at least let Rahim have a decent phone. He would never understand why his dad seemed to hate technology so much. Maybe he'd had a bad experience with a calculator as a kid. Rahim closed the door to his room and fell across his bed. Horror movie posters fought for space with old-school hip-hop posters on his walls. N.E.R.D., Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Outkast, and his Four the Hard Way posters took up the most space. Two bookshelves full of horror novels and a few mysteries lined the far wall. Other than those few possessions, his room was sparse. Rahim pulled the cell phone out of his back pocket and touched the screen. It lit up with a pale greenish light. His name was in Old English letters across the top of the screen. There were also several icons for different apps. Rahim tapped on the search engine icon. Yesterday he'd told an eensy-weensy lie about having a social studies paper due. Today his teacher actually assigned them a paper. Might as well get a start on it. He typed the words Philadelphia Public Library into the search bar. His paper was about the library system--one of his favorite subjects. The phone might be a hideous blue, but he could still use it to do his homework. He just wouldn't take it to school again. Ever. The screen glowed as the green LED on the top blinked on and off like it was winking at him. "Don't tell me this gonna die already." Rahim shook the phone up and down with both hands. The screen began to glow brighter. "Come on." The screen flickered in time with the green LED. I should've asked her how long I gotta shake this thing, he thought. The screen stopped flickering and went black. Rahim stopped shaking the phone. "Did I break it?" In a flash the screen glowed so bright it hurt his eyes. He squeezed them tight. At the same time, a strange sensation flowed over his whole body. It was like he was swimming in warm, gooey water. The white light from the phone died down. He no longer felt like he was swimming. He felt cold. No, scratch that-- he was freezing . Rahim opened his eyes. "What the . . . ?" he said, but his words trailed off into a muffled grumbling. He suddenly realized why he was cold. He wasn't in his room. He was standing on the sidewalk in front of the West Side branch of the Philadelphia Library. Rahim shook his head. People filed around him as his mouth gaped open. "I gotta be dreaming," he said to no one in particular. He almost pinched himself, but he knew for a fact he wasn't dreaming. The cold stinging his cheeks told him that much. "Oh man. Oh man. OH MAN." He wasn't sure how far the library was from his house, but he was sure he hadn't sleepwalked over here. "Man, it's soooo cold," Rahim said. "You got that right." Nodding, a homeless man pushed a shopping cart past him. Rahim stared at the back of the man's head as he continued down the street. He could have sworn he'd seen him before. Rahim touched the screen on his phone. Maybe this was some computer simulation Kasia had installed in the phone. No, that was silly. He wasn't even wearing a VR visor. He had to get back home. He could figure it all out once he got out of the cold. He touched the screen and pulled up the map icon. He didn't know if he had enough for a cab and he wasn't sure if there was a subway nearby. He typed in his address and hit ENTER. The green LED began to flicker on and off again. "Oh, come--" Rahim began to say. The phone glowed with the same blinding white light. "--on," he finished. Rahim looked around. He was standing in front of his house. "What is going on!?" It didn't matter. Right now, it was too cold to be standing outside without a jacket. Rahim went in the house and closed the door behind him. "I didn't hear you leave," his dad said, sitting in his chair, but this time he had a larger book in his lap. Rahim stopped short. "I thought you and Mom were at the grocery store," Rahim mumbled. "We've been back for an hour. I thought you were upstairs doing your homework." Dad closed his book. "Um . . . I, uh . . . went out the back door. I went over to Kasia's earlier, and I thought I had dropped something." "What?" "Huh?" "What did you think you had dropped?" Dad asked. He folded his hands in his lap and stared at Rahim. "Uh . . . my notes from class today," Rahim said. He headed for the stairs. "How's the homework coming?" his dad asked. "Almost done," he said over his shoulder. Once he was back in his room and sitting on his bed, he hit the phone icon. He knew Kasia's number by heart, but she had programmed it into the phone. "You coming over to do another track?" Kasia said when she answered. "What's wrong with this phone?" Rahim said. His fingertips were still numb. "Well, since we're talking on it, I'm gonna say nothing," Kasia said. "For real, what's wrong with it? I did a search for the library website and the next thing I know I'm standing in front of it. Then I put in my address and poof! I was back here. Tell me what's wrong with this phone," Rahim said. "Okay, calm down. First of all, are you sure that's what happened? Like you didn't fall asleep and dream that you were at the library?" Kasia asked. "I didn't fall asleep. I'm telling you this phone is, like, magic or something," Rahim said. "Magic is just science we don't understand. I still think you fell asleep. I mean, I'm good, but I'm not that good." "I'm bringing it back. I'll be right there." "Now hold on. Let's do a little experiment. Do a search for my address. No, I tell you what, do a search for a place you've always wanted to go. Let's see what happens." "Uh, nope. I'm just bringing this thing back," Rahim said. "Look, you're telling me I accidentally invented a teleporter. I think you're having a hallucination." "This ain't a hallucination, Kasia! When I typed in the address for the library, my parents were out getting food. I come back to the house, and they say they been home for an hour. This is X-ray glasses all over again," Rahim said. "Okay, just calm down. I mean, on the one hand, you might really have teleported. But on the other hand, if you are . . . making a mistake, we can figure it out. And if you're right, what's the worst that happens?" Rahim pulled the phone from his ear and peered at it. Was it possible he had imagined the whole thing? If he was imagining it and he ended up at Kasia's, that wouldn't be that bad, would it? "Hold on." Rahim typed in the place he wanted to go to more than any other. A place he had dreamed about going. A place that was literally impossible for him to go to unless Kasia's phone was a teleporter and a time machine. The green light began to flicker as the screen began to glow. "What's happening?" Kasia asked. "The green light is blinking and the screen is glowing," Rahim said. "Uh-oh." "What do you mean 'uh-oh'? Kasia, what is uh-oh?" "It means the power source I used might be a . . . little bit unstable." "What should I do?" Rahim yelled. Before Kasia could answer, the swimming sensation overwhelmed him as bright white light filled his field of vision. The world around him seemed to fade away in bits and pieces as he began to float into that white light. Excerpted from The Rhythm of Time by Questlove, S. A. Cosby 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.