This is the first of an above-average four-volume time-travel series, though it’s set mostly in the present day. There’s a strong government-conspiracy-action-thriller element, too. For fifty-year-old freelance journalist Ray Burton of New York, it all starts when he’s scattering the ashes of a recently deceased good friend in the vicinity of the ghost town of Hollow Rock, near Flagstaff, Arizona, and gets caught in a sudden thunderstorm. He ducks into a small cave on a hillside above the few remains of the town to wait it out and stumbles on a dust-covered trunk that has obviously been there a very long time. Inside are some 19th-century period clothes, an old handgun, and bunch of papers. “Neat,” he thinks. But then, at the very bottom of the trunk are a driver’s license, a small camera and some memory cards. And there’s a note to the finder from someone calling himself Stan Hooper, saying he was born in 1970 and “will die here” in 1870. What the hell?
Ray’s disappointed to find the modern stuff, . . . but the trunk obviously has been there a long time. And he’s an investigator by nature and habit, so he hauls the trunk out of the cave and back to his car. And at his motel, he slips the memory cards into his laptop and discovers more than a thousand photos of very authentic-seeming scenes of the busy town and its inhabitants 150 years earlier.
Huh. There’s a mystery here, obviously. Maybe a good story, too. He’s gotten rather bored with the things he’s been writing since retiring from his earlier career as a noted war correspondent in the danger zones of the world, and this find is tiring up his old sense of excitement and curiosity. But on his long drive back to the east coast, he can’t shake the feeling that he’s being tracked, that someone is taking an interest in his find, and that automatically makes him nervous.
Ray has been in some very tight spots before, and he’s used to taking care of himself. And two of the people he sees in those photos of Hollow Rock are of famously missing people -- a mystery author from the 1920s and a young actress from only a few years before the present. What are they doing in what appears to be 1870? I’m not familiar with this author, but he has a lot of other books under his belt and I’m a sucker for time travel yarns, and this is a well written one with a twisty plot and credible characters. The action is pretty much continuous from the very beginning, with the author skillfully weaving the background tech into the narrative. A very enjoyable read.