Review by Booklist Review
Time travel has been a popular subject of fantastic fiction since the dawn of the genre. Its tropes have become exceedingly familiar to modern sf audiences. One of the most basic of those tropes is that the author must first set out the rules for time travel that operate in their story. As the title suggests, these rules are important in Fracassi's (No One Is Safe! 2024) novel, and he lays them out at the very beginning. Beth is a scientist who, with her late husband, has invented a machine for time travel. However, there are certain mysteries to the process she cannot explain. Also, the corporate overlord financing Beth's work is a nefarious presence that provides the story's conflict. Fracassi's plot will be predictable to those well versed in time-travel stories, yet his focus on Beth's interior emotional life helps elevate the tale beyond a series of oh-so-familiar conventions, making readers care about our protagonist's troubles. The end result is a diverting, entertaining book.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Corporate politics and experimental physics clash in this exciting sci-fi outing from Fracassi (A Child Alone with Strangers). Soon after quantum science researcher Colson and his brilliant wife, Beth, create a wormhole in their laboratory at Langan Corporation allowing them to time travel, Colson dies in a freak car accident, leaving Beth in charge of the laboratory. How the time machine works--beyond finagling with the neurophysics of human consciousness--is anyone's guess, but sharp-tongued Beth is determined to continue the dangerous experiments that sent Colson, and now her, back in time for sessions that last only 90 seconds. When Langan's unscrupulous CEO invites a journalist to witness the machine in action, Beth risks back-to-back journeys to save her position as project lead. Each journey forces her to relive her most painful memories, including the plane crash that killed her sister and parents. Meanwhile, during the downtime between voyages, strange things begin happening: she hallucinates Colson and discovers a ghost computer file written by him warning her of malicious glitches in the software. Underlying the brisk time-caper plot is Colson's ominous warning that scientists should not play God. Sci-fi fans with a taste for noir will savor this one. (Feb.)
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Review by Library Journal Review
Scientist Beth Darlow doesn't physically travel in time; her body is still in her lab, strapped to the machine that sends her consciousness back to the most traumatic moments of her life. Moments she can only observe but not change--unless she already has, merely by observation. But Beth's project is about to be yanked out from under her, even though she's on the brink of a breakthrough. She's interested in research, but her shady funder's plans are as unscrupulous as his financial dealings. He wants to change history for profit, while she's convinced that she already has and it's breaking her, one altered memory at a time. The framework of this story is the race for research funding and the cost of academic rivalry as Beth and her assistant pursue science while her funder plots to eliminate them and steal their project. Beth's desperation to salvage her own ever-changing history makes her desperate, leading to a thrilling, high-stakes ending. VERDICT Fracassi (Boys in the Valley) turns from horror to sci-fi in his latest. Recommended for fans of technothrillers and those looking for a different take on time travel.--Marlene Harris
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