Time Loves A Hero, is a re-publication of Allen Steele’s novel Chronospace. As explained in the new introduction, this is the title which he originally intended – but in case you have already read Chronospace, be aware that there is no new story here. In turn then, Chronospace is the full narrative from which the novella “Where Angels Fear to Tread” was extracted for publication in the October/November 1997 Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine. After the novella won a Hugo Award and was nominated for other awards, the extended novelized Chronospace was able to be published in 2001. The original novella makes up the center part of the three-part novel.
The novella “Where Angels Fear to Tread” is set in a contemporary America in a slightly alternate timeline and concerns Dr. Zack Murphy, a physicist who has found work in the federal Office of Paranormal Sciences after the near shut-down of NASA. Zack is awakened by government agents in the night, and swept to the site of a crashed UFO, which he theorizes to be a human time ship from the future rather than an extraterrestrial alien craft. The reality of the UFO is interestingly revealed through means that are other than those intended by military leadership, and that is the charm of the story, I think. Clues to the history leading to this slightly alternate timeline augment the action of the story, as well.
In the novel, another bigger story is wrapped around the deservedly award-winning novella. In the bigger story, we are introduced to Dr. David Z. Murphy, a NASA scientist in a timeline much closer to our own. Murphy has written a speculative science article published in Analog, that theorizes UFOs are actually human time ships from the future, and which gets him in all kinds of professional trouble. The novel also introduces us to the crew of the 24th century timeship Oberon, which is preparing for a mission to the explosion of the German airship Hindenberg in New Jersey in 1937. The question of whether it was an accident or deliberate sabotage is finally to be determined.
Hard SF is a subgenre of science fiction that is often thought of as focusing on known science and technological capabilities. However, I feel that is a narrow definition, and that Hard SF is writing which focusses on speculative concepts, whether they are known science or not. Science and technology are used to enhance the plausibility of the speculation. Time Loves A Hero, like most time travel stories from H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine onwards, are more about the concept of changes in history, and the resulting alternate timelines, than about the mechanics of time travel. In this novel, Steele writes that time travel has been possible since the time of Einstein, and all that was lacking was the financial investment and appropriate technology. I think plausibility is decreased by such a fun, but boldly false claim - rather than enhanced – especially since no real effort is made to actually explain time travel. There is no new time-travelling concept here; the puzzle of the timelines, and the identification of the points of departure, dominate the reader’s attention.
While I eagerly read the first two parts of the three-part novel and recommend it overall, in the end, I found the reality of the wrapper story and timeline to be not as good as the implied wrapper story and timeline that was suggested in the original gem of a novella.