THE PREMISE
In the Year of our Lord 2023, I am sick of time travel stories, which is a problem if I'm going to start reading Voyager... At least with The Escape the time travel shenanigans are given an absurd bureaucratic twist, which helps this story stand out from others in this sub-genre.
In need of raw materials, Voyager heads to lifeless Alcawell, a "haunted planet" with 100,000+ of the exact same ship, gridded out and spanning the width of Texas. Upon inspection of one of these ships, Torres, Kim, and Neelix are whisked off to 300,000 years into the past. They find themselves lost and under arrest by a race of beings who use time travel like how modern Earthlings use air travel. WILD premise. Paradoxes are avoided by enforcing strict laws that divide all of time into 500,000-year Periods and as long as you never travel within the same Period, you won't be immediately arrested and executed.
THE GOOD
The government in control of this temporal airport reminds me of Marvel's TVA, both in function and absurdity. And despite this being a time travel story with universe-sized stakes, the fate of the multiverse never felt at risk of collapse. The stakes are with Torres, Kim, and Neelix getting back to the correct-year Voyager. Add in the astronomical size of the time gaps (400,000,000+ years) between crew and starship, and reuniting seems totally impossible.
THE BAD
Due to the nature of this being a time travel story, the final climax of the story happens off-screen. More annoying was the author's habit of emphasizing a sentence by repeating it, "Janeway had to find a way. She had to."
Neelix and Kim act as comic reliefs, but are often just interrupting important conversations with unhelpful oneliners. Also, nowhere in the book is there an explanation of how long a year is to Aclawell. Are we following Federation standard time or is the universal translator also doing math conversions? I found these issues a little annoying, but they didn't take away from my enjoying this book.