The last stop in my time travel marathon was About Time: Twelve Stories by Jack Finney. One of the delights of this collection is that, surprisingly, not every tale is dictated by time travel. "Exotic travel" would be a more accurate description, with characters dulled by their daily routines each glimpsing a means to escape into a more exciting world. Five of the stories were originally published in 1957 in the anthology The Third Level while seven of the stories first appeared in 1962 as part of I Love Galesburg in the Springtime. Science fiction fantasy just doesn't get any more irresistible.
Five stars:
I Love Galesburg in the Springtime. Reporter Oscar Mannheim of the Register-Mail, a local boy who refused any opportunities that would've taken him away from his hometown of Galesburg, Illinois, investigates the account of a business investor who claims he was nearly run down by a streetcar, the likes of which hasn't existed in town in twenty years. His story may be connected to a blaze extinguished by a phantom fire brigade and a farmer whose out-of-service wall phone rings one night.
Home Alone (original title The Intrepid Aeronaut). Charley Burke's observation of a hawk floating in the winds high above his home in Marin County inspires him to build a balloon, a project he keeps a secret. On his maiden moonlit flight over the San Francisco Bay Area, Charley's activities are revealed to a neighbor, Edna Landias, while she walks her dog. Mrs. Landias seeks Charley out and begs him to take with her him on his next flight.
Second Chance. A college senior in Hylesburg, Illinois realizes his dream to restore a 1923 Jordan Playboy, purchased for seventy-five dollars from a farmer who reveals that the car was damaged a year after it rolled off the lot when the daredevil teenager behind the wheel decided to race a train and lost, killing himself and his girlfriend. His restoration complete, the classic car lover finds himself racing into 1923 on the night of the Playboy's fateful race.
Hey, Look at Me!. Book critic Peter Marks of Mill Valley, California develops a friendship with a solitary, destitute writer named Maxwell Kingery, who feels he's destined to be celebrated as a great author and man. Kingery's ambition is overshadowed by a chronic case of bad luck and even after his dreams die, his spirit lives on, much to the horror of Marks and his wife Cora.
Four stars:
Such Interesting Neighbors. San Rafael resident Al Lewis recounts his strange neighbors, Ted & Ann Hellenbek, who arrived in town with new clothes and furniture. Ann has a habit of walking into closed doors. Ted fancies himself as an inventor, as well as an amateur science fiction writer, and shares with Al a fantastic tale he made up about a future where time travel is the most popular tourist attraction, so popular, that the population begins plummeting when people relocate to the past.
Where the Cluetts Are. An architect is offered the job of building a dream house in Darley, Connecticut for a shipbuilder named Sam Cluett. Reviewing designs with the two men, the client's wife Ellie stumbles upon an architectural rendering drawn but never constructed in the 1880s. Money being no object, the Cluetts pick the vintage design, purchasing land and using all the original building materials. Once complete, the magnificent house has a curious effect on the couple.
I'm Scared. A widower in New York City tunes in to a radio broadcast from twenty years in the past. His anecdote introduces him to others who have their own strange experiences to relate: a strip of gray paint that appears on a house one year before the owner begins repainting, a couple whose marriage is dissolving after a family photo when developed reveals a strange woman standing in her place, a detective trying to identify a man struck dead in Times Square wearing 19th century garb and carrying ancient pocket change. The widower's deduction about what these stories foretell is not good.
These savory tales constitute a wonderful appetizer to Time and Again, the full-course time travel novel Jack Finney published in 1970 and the best book of its kind I've read. Several of the stories feature elements that would stick in Finney's head long enough to appea in his novel: New York City, the 1880s, architecture, sketching, Einstein theory. Finney, who graduated college in Galesburg, IL in 1934, worked in New York at an advertising agency and settled in Northern California in the early '50s, infuses his work with the atmosphere and mood swings of each of those three locations.
My favorite story of the bunch, Second Chance, uses a vintage car as a time travel device, returning the young driver thirty years in the past, where he risks tampering with his family tree. I find it improbable that Bob Gale & Robert Zemeckis were unaware of the story before they wrote Back to the Future.
Each of the stories was written more or less during the time The Twilight Zone was on the air. While Jack Finney never wrote for the television series, his work fits far too easily into the dark fantasy of the program, making it tempting to think Rod Serling was aware of Finney's outstanding work as well.