received this book as an ARC and am leaving an honest review.
I loved this book. I usually shy away from time travel as a theme in books. I just find it so contrived. Sam Bowring has written a book which features time travel and it works. He really has a unique take on it. He has developed his own vocabulary to accompany the concept and even attempts to explain it using his own take as well as some elements of 'classical' time travel tropes. I almost understood it! (lol) He's really thought it through. His explanation of how the temporal paradox works and doesn't, is brilliant.
Scharlette Day is a TSA agent in Australia, She hates her life, her job, her world. Its boring. boring. boring. One day an incident occurs at the x ray scanner involving two strangers with laser guns and aliens. Due to Scharlette deciding to be especially diligent at her job for a moment, she ends up with a device belonging to one of the strangers in her possession. When he returns to retrieve it, all the fun begins. Enter Time Agent Tomothy from very far in the future. Scharlette can't and won't give him his device back and he really needs it. She overhears another Agent analysing her and finds out she is sterile and therefore 'doesn't matter'. This means she has no offspring and therefore her time line ends right here, in this present. This is great! Because she doesn't matter, she can time travel and not cause any ripples that will change the future or the present. She decides to go along with Tomothy.
The central plot concerns a general recall of a historic timeline. Something has been 'edited' in order to purposely make a change to the future in an effort to change the history of mankind. Tomothy is somehow aware that something has changed, but he can't remember it and wants to know why. What follows is his, Scharlette and Gordon, his time ship's, pursuit of the missing thread. On this central thread is braided a wonderful story which encompasses all the things one would want from a sci fi 'space opera': space battles, mysterious relationships, talking time ships, HD rooms in which your fantasies can come true and more.
I really thought the story was going to end a certain way. It certainly seemed so, but then Bowring flipped the script and an element of the story which had seemed somewhat superfluous and almost forgotten, suddenly became central to the resolution of the story. It was very satisfying.
I highly recommend this book. I hope, when I have time, to read more from this author.