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Time Squared

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Jonas Arnell, Tipper Montgomery, and crew launches from Jupiter Station. The crew of the Aevus investigate a mysterious signal coming from the star Gliese 667.


Join the crew of the Aevus on this high-velocity, action packed, time travel adventure as they discover their own ship from the future.

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Published May 31, 2016

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About the author

Brian K. Larson

64 books277 followers
Brian was born and raised in Seattle in 1959. He grew up in the town of Mountlake Terrace, a small suburb north of the city. Brian, being the youngest, had two siblings, his eldest brother, Mike and sister, Pam. School was challenging, as Brian suffers with Dyslexia, a learning disability that affects 1 in 15 Americans. That didn’t stop Brian. He was named "bookworm" in school because he always had his nose in a book.

Brian received his MBA in 2010 in Business, now writes for fun, living his lifelong dream of writing science fiction books. He enjoys his off time, with his seventh grade sweetheart, Diana Rose now for going on eighteen years. She has been by his side and continues to supports his writing. Brian says that without her encouragement, his dream would never have become a reality. They now live in Marysville, Washington.

It is Brian’s hope that through his writing he will fill hearts with joy to readers all over the world, sparking their imaginations.

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39 reviews1 follower
September 23, 2022
It wasn't awful. Isn't that a terrible way to start a review, but so many ebooks I have recently read were just awful. I love convoluted time travel stories, and this is one. Except this isn't so much a mystery wrapped in time travel paradox (or lack thereof) as a rapid fire blast of half formed fallout from intervention by a mysterious attendant (which frankly is very derivative of a blend of two Star Trek (original) stories). The problem is the book spends most of its time in trite, silly dialog without any accompanying character development, and way too little time in structuring a real, diverging/merging timeline story. It is not so much wrong (in that sense) as simply not fleshed out for one to see, even in retrospect (which is when you actually see it in better time travel novels).

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