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Timeshare #2

Timeshare: Second Time Around

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As head of security for Timeshare Unlimited--a very special kind of travel agency--John Surrey can go back to the good old days any time he likes. And in this second installment of the highly-praised series, he takes a voyage to the Roaring '20s...traveling from small-town America to gangland Chicago to the speakeasies of New York City--to find a famous young filmmaker who's gone off in search of the woman he loves...

247 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published October 1, 1998

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Joshua Dann

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
552 reviews2 followers
February 27, 2018
Time travel classic

Middle book of superb time travel trilogy. This one was set mostly in 1920s, but other two mostly WWII, all intelligent well researched masterpieces equal to 1632 series or even better.
Profile Image for Andy W Taylor.
104 reviews
January 4, 2011
From Andy's Ancrhonisms[return][return]When a wealthy client goes missing in time, Timeshare Unlimited calls upon John Surrey, ex-LAPD and currently head of security for the time travel agency to rescue the client. John together with his wife Althea travel from 2007 to 1920's America where they embark on a cross-country mission to track down their target and return him to the present.[return][return]In Joshua Dann's second instalment in the Timeshare series he continues to flesh out the central characters he introduced readers to in his first novel, Timeshare, while entertaining the reader with a jaunt across 1926 America.[return][return]During John Surrey's cross-country search for the elusive Hollywood producer and Timeshare client Mitch Levitan, the author manages to include scenes with no less than nine celebrities (and in some cases yet-to-be celebrities). Names including Charles Lindbergh, Ronald Reagan, Al Capone, Bugs Moran, Bugsy Siegel, Cab Calloway, Edgar Hoover, Dorothy Parker and the Algonquin Round Table and Japanese Commander Yamamoto. With the exception of Dorothy Parker, few if any of the historical figures are central to the plot and at times it feels as if Dann has constructed scenes specifically to name-drop and is using Mitch Levitan as a plot device to string together the celebrity cameos.[return][return]All criticisms aside, I felt that Dann's writing shone it's brightest when he was dealing with his central characters and their connections to the past. Whether it was Mitch Levitan visiting his Uncle Harry Levitan as a young struggling writer or Terry Rapport visiting his grandparents as honest store-owners trying to get by. The celebrity name-dropping during the rest of the novel threatens to overwhelm the poignancy that Dann develops through these central characters during these few brief scenes. [return][return]For Full Review - http://www.timetravelreviews.com/book...
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