Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Time Travel




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by Kim Van Sickler

By pure chance, three of the last books I've read treated time as a fluid concept. The designations between past, present and in one case, the future blurred. Events in the past were shown to have enormous significance further along in time. And the stories were told via the narrator(s) gliding back and forth to different time periods, furthering the impression that time was elastic and we, the readers, were time travelers.

I thought this mode of storytelling was fun and exciting, and kept the reader on her toes for actual time travel books like Audrey Niffenegger's The Time Traveler's Wife.

And it follows that we'd slip back and forth in time in the book I'm currently reading, M.J. Rose's The Reincarnationist. The main character in this book is seriously injured in a bomb blast, and when he recovers, finds himself especially attuned to two of his past lives: one a hundred years ago, and one, closer to seventeen hundred years earlier.

But this time slipping device was also used quite effectively by A.S. King in Please Ignore Vera Dietz . The story starts in the present, but then chapters jump back and forth between the past and present until Vera comes to terms with what she needs to do for herself and her dead former best friend Charlie...and does it. The time travel aspect of storytelling here is purely for the benefit of illustrating how Vera has to come to terms with her past to fix her future. There's a bonus of a parallel story involving her father. And the book spotlights how our past actions (or inactions) can come back to haunt us. King could have told her tale chronologically, but she opted for a nonlinear way to communicate with us. It was an effective way to pull me in, keep me actively engaged, and connect the dots.


And for a story that takes time and turns it on its head, there's Jennifer Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad.  There isn 't one star in this book, but rather a series of characters who rub up against one another, leaving a lasting effect. Each chapter is another opportunity for Egan to turn the tables on us, leaving us to navigate which character, at which point in their life, is narrating, and how the chapters interrelate. This is POV time travel on steroids. Nothing is off limits here, even traveling into the future. For readers who like twists and turns and scenic routes in their storytelling, this book is a must read.

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This mode of storytelling seemed like it would be an effective way to tell my current WIP: The Mall at Gullybrook. So, I'm trying it. My YA WIP is a story of the kidnapping of three American teenagers from the same small town American mall to serve the sex slave industry. It skips back and forth over a two-year period. Time is the girls' enemy, and their friend. Time allows them to either remember or forget; plan for the future or give up. It really is a powerful literary construct.

Have you read any of the books I've mentioned here, or others that allow you to slip between past, present, and/or future with ease? Do you find it disconcerting or exhilarating? Have you tried writing that way yourself?

15 comments:

  1. My WIP is a time travel story too. Thanks for the reading list. I need it.

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  2. I've never written a time travel book. Thanks for the book recommendations. And Wow! Your new project sounds great.

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  3. I love the Time Traveler's Wife! (Though I have to admit to seeing the movie not reading the book.) I'm intrigued by the idea of A Visit From the Goon Squad. It sounds very complex. I wish I had the guts to write something that off-the-wall. Thanks for all the info! :-)

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  4. Wow! Your story sounds intriguing. I adore time travel/time slip novels. One of my all time faves is Alison Uttley's A Traveler in Time, and I gobbled up The Time Traveler's Wife and Please Ignore Vera Dietz. I'll need to find The Reincarnationist; it sounds intriguing. Have you read Myra McIntire's Hourglass series?

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    1. No, I haven't, but I just put Hourglass on my reading list. Thanks for the suggestion!

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  5. I'm not really a time travel writer but the books you shared sound quite intriguing.

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  6. I'm not into time travel books. I'm not sure I'd even want the ability to skip around time. I'd be too paranoid of messing things up. :)

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  7. I've always been a fan of a good time travel book. My favorite one for young readers is the decades-old, but still good, Pam Conrad''s STONE WORDS.

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    1. Just checked out your suggestion. It looks like a wonderful middle grade read. I put it on my to-read list!

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  8. Oh, I so loved VERA something fierce (all A.S. King books, really)!

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    1. I met her at the Backspace Writers Conference. In a bar. And she was very chatty and down-to-earth. She lived in Ireland for twelve years raising chickens! She also gave our keynote address and served on a couple author panels. She is as funny and quirky and vulnerable in person as she is in her books.

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  9. All of these books sound like ones I'd love to read! But I'm ashamed to say I still haven't read, The Time Traveler's Wife. I really need to get on that... Thanks for the reviews. (:

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  10. The only recent time-travel book I've read is Time Traveler's Wife, which I enjoyed it. The Reincarnationist sounds intriguing, too. Since I'm not a fantasy writer, writing such a book would be very challenging.

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  11. Debut author, Jen Greyson, has a great new time travel novel out...the protagonist slips between the now and ancient Roman Spain.

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