Second Hand Daylight is a speculative fiction novel by Eugen Bacon and Andrew Hook starring two characters, Green and Zada, whose lives seem to be worlds apart yet so near. The story starts out with Green, a 27year-old male with a troubled childhood. His life changes one night at one of his favourite hangout spots. For someone with zero ambition like Green and a zeal for life, he has what one would call a future.
‘’My life flashed before my eyes’’ would be an understatement for Green who at a sudden flash of light on the dance floor had a near death experience that started pushing him into the future. After that weird night of meeting his ‘’possible girl’’ his life ceased to be normal. He starts time jumping unknowingly. He would wake up tomorrow and it would already be next week, next month, two or three years into the future.
Time travel is supposed to be fun, or at least an adventure, but for Green it was torture as he failed to maintain relationships with his family and best friend. This led him to lose his job and shelter, his childhood home. The only silver -lining in this is he some-how got compensated for it and had the money from that settlement double and found himself a millionaire. His way off into the future and starts ‘’Social Boxing’’ about his predicament hoping to find some sort of help in an attempt to grab the sheets of time. There is a little glimmer of hope when someone actually genuinely responds.
Before that happens his pushed into the future where he is a business mogul and owns a team who specialise in investigating his time jumps. He is told that the team sent a young woman named Zada to find Green and stabilise his time jumps. Future Green wonders how and why someone would risk going into the past to save his past self, leaving all they know behind without the possibility of getting back.
Zada, the opposite of Green, a woman full of zeal and ambition seemingly ahead of her time and bored leaves in search of Green from the past. She fails at first in her attempts but still meets the people who cared about Green, who lived as though he was dead when he was still alive due to not knowing what was going on in their friends and sons life. Just as she is about to give up searching for Green, she visits the one place she thought she would find him, and then it happens, the opening scene is the end. She finds out it was her all along, she was the one who had de-stabilised Green’s time jumps, and it was happening in a loop, she in that moment before she loses him decides to make things right and re-sets the Tessaract.
I enjoyed reading this time travel story. It has a modern touch, punchy, edgy, adventurous, and zesty. The two authors gave us a fresh approach by bringing the two stories together. We are always told that in order to have a future we must look into the past. For answers etc and Zada in this sense, found her future in the past and almost completely felt wholesome.
The story kept me lingering and wanting more. Though I have never time travelled I found the story relatable. We may not time jump but we do travel in our thoughts and dreams, we even go through events that seem familiar to us. The mystery is always in the questions, ‘’Have I been here?’’, ‘’Why do I feel like I have done this before?’’, ‘’Why do I feel like I know this person?’’ We all at one point feel like we are drifting through life like Green, watching it pass by and live around people like Zada who just cruise through it. We all compare the progress of other people’s lives to ours, as if they are in some kind of time jump and we are stagnant and out of touch with them. I learned that in life we must learn to check up on our loved one’s and not take them for granted. It took Green a few time jumps to realise the importance of relationships.
I found no negative aspects in this book and in the way this story was told, my only complaint is that it ended. This book was well-edited and made for smooth reading, I recommend this book to an adult audience as it contains certain scenes of an adult nature. I give it a rating of 5 out of 5 stars.