An abandoned vessel. A missing past. A world lost in time.
When a fully rigged forty-five-foot wooden schooner is found drifting off the Florida coast—intact, empty, and untraceable—boatbuilder Nathan Kirks is sent to investigate. The vessel appears recently built using traditional New England methods, yet no record of her construction exists.
Granted permission to sail her north to Brunswick for a maritime festival, Nathan embarks with two close friends and a cautious museum curator. But once they’re offshore, instruments fail, radios fall silent, and the sea itself begins to change.
When they finally make landfall, the marinas are deserted, the towns abandoned, and the world they knew has vanished. Will they find a way back—or become stranded forever in a time that isn’t their own?
From Scott B. Williams, author of In Times to Come and Feral Nation—a new series where the fight to survive begins beyond the edge of time.
Scott B. Williams has been writing about his adventures for more than twenty-five years. His published work includes dozens of magazine articles and twenty-five books, with more projects currently underway.
His interest in backpacking, sea kayaking and sailing small boats to remote places led him to pursue the wilderness survival skills that he has written about in his popular survival nonfiction books and travel narratives such as On Island Time: Kayaking the Caribbean, an account of a two-year solo kayaking expedition he undertook at age 25.
With the release of The Pulse: A Novel of Surviving the Collapse of the Grid in 2012, Scott moved into writing fiction full time. His post-apocalyptic and action & adventure stories draw heavily on his personal wilderness and ocean experiences to create believable scenarios often set in dire circumstances. To learn more about his upcoming books or to contact Scott, visit his website: www.scottbwilliams.com
A brand new wood sail boat is found drifting in the Atlantic ocean. A museum curator is asked to check the ship out. He and a few friend sail the boat and discover themselves transported into the future and will want to return to their own timeline. Nice plot
The book started very slow and took almost 70% of the book before the pace picked up enough to be interesting. Since it finally started to be interesting, I preordered the second book that won't be available until July 2026. I can't help to think that this slow start with excessive "filler" was designed to push people to buy the second book.
Having read the 'In Times to Come' series, I had an idea of what to expect here. Suffice it to say, there are common themes and style of writing of course.
We have a mysterious ancient schooner - found in pristine condition, with zero modern amenities and zero information or crew - found floating around. We then have the naval museum assigned to trying to find out any info about the ship, in this case taking it to a wooden ship fair in a town close by. Our guy Nathan and his two friends, along with the most annoying man called Henry, decide to take it out. The three friend's subterfuge of wanting to take the ship into the ocean versus what Henry wants, which is sticking on the known little waterway - actually leads to them being pushed to the future. The story is quite interesting and has plenty mystery.
The author is meticulous and takes his description of ships very seriously - much to the detriment of readers who have no such knowledge of ships & simply want to read a book. He also has a knack for his books being under 250 pages - this wouldn't be an issue if he didn't go into so much detail in conversations that really can be skipped. This means that the books abruptly ends without much plot lore being revealed. Considering the second book isn't released yet...
At least half the book was spent on development of the characters to the point I quickly realized it was only volume one. So, since I already understood the characters, I ended up skimming far ahead until I found some action starting to happen. Alas, I was now three quarters of the way through the book.
The premise is quite interesting. But I'm wondering if volumes one and two - hopefully that will be all - could have been combined to make a one volume complete story?
Similar concept to “1632” by Eric Flint, but open seas on a mysterious schooner. Good plot, believable characters and historical detail. I recommend it highly but I’m irritated by the abrupt ending. And they hook you with a KindleUnlimited first volume, then you HAVE to finish the series. Just get the book. You’ll like it.
The first two thirds of the book just could not draw me in. A lot of background details that bored me. I was going to quit reading when I skipped ahead chapter by chapter until Chapter 14 when they were finally on the boat beginning their adventure. It drew me in quickly. 5 stars after that. I pre ordered book 2.
I love the genre of this book. I would recommend it to any boating, time travel enthusiast. Its well written and wonderfully describes the South East coast of Florida and Georgia. My only disappointment is haven't to wait until the end of summer for its sequel.
Highly recommend for Apocalypse fans who crave a plot diversion from the usual reads. The first part of the book builds the rich characters, the mysterious ship, and the interaction between all. Love this!!
Author clearly knows his sailing. The terminology is spot on. Author knows the area of north Florida and coastal Georgia. The plot is plausible given the fantastic situation.
Recommended for lovers of time travel apocalypse scenarios.
right up there with the best of plots. just from the cover you expect one course, but even I was surprised. I love a writer with a leaned past the probable. Way to go Scott. Mmm
This would appear to be the introductory story to a much longer series. This first book sets the stage for the rest of the story. I will continue reading to see where it goes.
Altered Course – The Passage is a gripping, time-bending adventure full of suspense, maritime mystery, and a chillingly empty world that will keep readers hooked from start to finish.
Too long getting to the point of the story and then the book ended. Unrealistic early on concerning the obsession with the boat and the idea of “sailing off” with it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The first half of the book was the author repeating the same stuff over and over about the boat and the issues between the main character, and his two bosses.