4 Phodopus Stars
Literature is awash with time travelers dating back to the 19th century. The mechanisms for time travel are as varied as the human imagination and include, but certainly are not limited to, suspended animation as in The Man Who Awoke by Laurence Manning; physical contact with magical objects abound: The Clock That Went Backwards by Edward Page Mitchell, Hermione's time turner in the Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling, and, more recently, Thrust by Lidia Yuknavitch; time banks as in Tourmalin's Time Cheques by F. Anstey; time portals you can simply walk through, one of my favorites being located at the back of a diner in 11/22/63 by Stephen King; timeslips as with Rip Van Winkle by Washington Irving, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain; manipulation of time by entities that exist outside of time as presented in The End of Eternity by Isaac Asimov; and genetic mutation as in The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger.
Time traveling, no matter how you do it, is a stellar ride. As weird and wonderful as all of the various time traveling modalities may be, my preferred method consists more of the nuts and bolts type time traveling ship. Originally* there was the Time Traveler, a Victorian scientist who invents a time traveling machine in The Time Machine by H.G. Wells; soon after there was the Cretaceous-going time machine used by Time Safari, Inc. in Ray Bradbury's A Sound Of Thunder; then there was the dimentionally transcendental Police Box, aka TARDIS, the exclusive time traveling ship of Doctor Who no matter which of the various authors penned the story; AND NOW there is Albert Chaudhury with Alan Shearer, the Phodopus time traveling companion!
Time Traveling With A Hamster is promoted as Childrens/Middle Grade/YA Science Fiction. While that may be the case, any “child at heart” up for a quirky, comedic, spirited ride will enjoy this speedy summer vacation read.
Al's sage Grandpa Byron explains to our protagonist, "I've got a good memory because I've trained it, but that is not the same as knowledge, and neither memory nor knowledge is the equal of wisdom." Grandpa then sips his chai & pulls away from the curb on his mauve scooter, safron robes fluttering in his wake. Al keeps company with one Cool Grandpa & a bevy of other quirky fun relatives, mates, and miscreants.
In a posthumous letter, Al's dad is trying to explain how the time machine works. As he tries to digest it, Al explains, “Do you remember learning multiplication in primary school. And instead of saying, 'What's five times four?' the teacher would say something like, 'There are five dogs, and each have four legs – how many legs are there altogether?' so you wouldn't get freaked out by the maths-ness of it all? Well, I can tell that's what my dad's doing, but I still don't get it.”
Al doesn't get “freaked out by the maths-ness” and does “get it” in his own way, taking us with him on a whirlwind of a ride. Hang on and Enjoy! This is a fun, fast, light hearted, yet physics-ly sound, summer vacation read. Recommend.
*In 1887, the novel Anacronópete by Spanish author Enrique Gaspar y Rimbau introduced the first time machine, predating H.G. Wells by 8 years. (en.Wikipedia.org)