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In the Keep of Time #2

In the Circle of Time

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Slowly the mist gathers around the circle of ancient stones, where Jennifer and Robert have been digging. A deathly silence hangs over everything.

Then, the mist finally clears, and they can't believe their eyes--Robert and Jennifer have somehow been transported into the future! Will they ever get back again? Or are they trapped there forever, prisoners of the terrible stones of time?

181 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1979

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Margaret J. Anderson

57 books40 followers

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5 stars
31 (26%)
4 stars
46 (38%)
3 stars
30 (25%)
2 stars
10 (8%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Shawn Thrasher.
2,025 reviews50 followers
August 7, 2022
I read and re-read this book numerous times as a kid. Although I didn’t know the term back then, it’s a timeslip book (not a time travel book, which is different in my mind). I always liked books where kids were taken from their day-to-day life a la The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, magically or otherwise, and thrust into an unfamiliar world they have to navigate. The Swiss Family Robinson has that element as well; By the Great Horn Spoon! is another one. Robert and Jennifer’s story of the misty stone circle that transports them through time was (and still is) fascinating to me. They are strongly developed characters - which is hard to do in a children’s novel sometimes (see my entry for In the Keep of Time), and Anderson’s setting is unique and creative.Interestingly, she had an understanding of climate change even back in 1979. I’m not sure if she’s still alive, but if she is, she must be saddened to see that what she wrote about, melting ice caps and flooded cities, is coming true, if not in the timeline she wrote about (2010 is mentioned although that isn’t when this book takes place). That forecasting (doomcasting) reminded me of another prescient book from my childhood that I enjoyed The Forever Formula (also another book where someone from one time is thrust into another unfamiliar time).
22 reviews6 followers
August 4, 2014
This is one of my favorite books from my childhood. I still have the copy my mom bought me through the school book program when I was in elementary school. I read it every few years even into my forties. Remarkably, it is still in decent condition.

It is a short but lovely tale that blends mysticism, legend and the delight of discovery. It is full of that simple innocent wonder that is too often passed over in today's children's lit. I think it is the first book I read where I understood the significance of how we view things differently at different stages in our lives.

I'm on the hunt for an electronic version to send to a friend. This is one book that deserves more attention than it has received.

Ms. Anderson, thank you so very much for giving us this story.
2 reviews
January 24, 2022
Le doy 4 estrellas a este libro porque, a pesar de no ser perfecto, resulta una lectura deliciosa para jóvenes y adolescentes y a mí me dejó prendado. Lo mejor es su presentación ya que nos introduce en un mundo mágico -una realidad paralela relacionada con unas piedras místicas perdidas entre la bruma- y además es puro años 80 -la época en la que fue escrito-. Bien es cierto que su posterior desarrollo no colmó todas mis expectativas pero aún así creo que se merece 4 estrellas como 4 soles.

En realidad, es una de esas lecturas que te dejan un poso por largo tiempo y a mí me dejó engatusado. Los personajes no son tan profundos pero las situaciones vividas sí que lo son y en esto el librito se lleva la palma. Es una lectura inocente de iniciación, con una parte de aventuras que quizá no es tan buena pero que nos transporta a la infancia gracias a las piedras de Arden. Muy nostálgico y muy infantil pero con su toque mágico que pervive en el tiempo. Muy bueno y muy recomendable.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
13k reviews482 followers
June 1, 2017
Sorry. The only thing young me would have found of interest here is that the contemporary children visit a (post-apocalyptic) future, and, luckily, encounter the culture (descended from East Indians) that has eschewed both violence and technology, rather than the culture that clings to violence as a way to attempt to cling to a life that includes machines.

But the book still reads more like fantasy than SF, with flaws and implausibilities in the predictions of the future. And there's too much (imo) emphasis on family stories, explorations of loyalty and friendship... but without any real feeling of authenticity or depth... That is to say, those humanistic themes were only cursorily developed.

I do have the sense, though, that there's something I'm missing. So, I'll round my 2.5 star rating up to three.
Profile Image for Bev.
3,280 reviews349 followers
June 29, 2020
From the back of the book: Slowly the mist gathers around the circle of ancient stones, where Jennifer and Robert have been digging. A silence hangs over everything. Then,the mist finally clears, and they can't believe their eyes--Robert and Jennifer have somehow been transported into the future! Will they ever get back again? Or are they trapped there forever, prisoners of the terrible stones of time?

My take: Juvenile time-travel. But I loved this when I was a kid.
Profile Image for Suzanne Hakeos.
27 reviews12 followers
March 4, 2014
My mom bought me this book in 1983. It was my first real exposure to books and I was hooked. Great book.
42 reviews1 follower
August 22, 2020
El libro que me enganchó a la lectura a los 13 años. Viajes en el tiempo para adolescentes. Nunca lo olvidaré. Se lo regalé a mi sobrina y como si nada...me lo volví a leer yo a los 35.
Profile Image for Miguel A. Mateos.
89 reviews6 followers
June 15, 2024
"Nunca hasta este abril había teñido "En el círculo del tiempo" de Margaret J. Anderson, aunque si en el pasado leí otros libros que transmitían la misma idea o ideas semejantes como "Un Mundo Feliz" de Huxley. Así que este libro me golpeó como la música de John Paine o la de H. Parker. Me transmitió esa inquietud de lo efímero como sus melodías. Me pareció una novela particularmente sinfónica con sus buenos tempos, esos vibratos, y esos juegos polifónicos y corales.

Ahora bien, si desde mis recuerdos de niño y mis escuchas musicales de joven me llevaban a la obra y músicos antes citadas. Hoy, con mi mirada actual, me hace pensar en "Hojas de hierba" de Walt Whitman y "Escalera" de Genaro Estrada por algo tan sencillo como la imagen descriptiva que se ofrece al lector de cada pasaje, de cara momento, de cada hecho. Me las recuerda por su evocación narrativa de imágenes que como un búho o lechuza el lector observa como si fuesen diseños en un jarrón etrusco o un ratón o rata que cazar, pero que en realidad cazan. (...)" Más sobre el libro en el Blog Annavalaina
Profile Image for Alejandro Galvan.
12 reviews
March 9, 2023
4.5 , estuvo mega entretenido , mi maestra de tlriid luego si saca vario libro bueno , la pase bien leyéndolo
Profile Image for Amanda Vasquez.
33 reviews
July 3, 2025
This was a good Middle School read. Easy, not dramatic, clean. Really not deep. But kept my kid’s interest well.
Profile Image for El Templo.
Author 17 books210 followers
Read
October 25, 2011
"En el siglo XXII, los cambios climáticos sufridos por la Tierra han derretido los casquetes polares y alterado la geografía del planeta. Todas las ciudades costeras acabaron sepultadas bajo las aguas, y lo que antes era Gran Bretaña se convirtió en una isla mucho más pequeña, de clima suave y benigno. Por otro lado, la falta de combustibles fósiles, agotados desde mediados del siglo XXI, trajo consigo el derrumbe del mundo tal y como lo conocimos y la llegada de una época de barbarie en la que las personas tratan de sobrevivir como pueden de los restos de una tecnología extinta. Pero entre esta desolación, la naturaleza vuelve a brotar con fuerza, y con ella, una vuelta a los orígenes y una nueva oportunidad para el ser humano; así, surgen comunidades de gente amable, totalmente contraria a la violencia, que vive en armonía con el mundo y con sus semejantes. Este es el futuro que nos plantea la novela En el Círculo del Tiempo, de Margaret J. Anderson, y resulta llamativo porque estamos hablando de un libro escrito hace treinta años, pero que ya vaticinaba las grandes preocupaciones de nuestro tiempo. Fue publicado en España por la editorial SM en 1986, pero ahora, cuando hablamos precisamente de los peligros del cambio climático, de la necesidad de buscar energías alternativas o de la paradójica incomunicación y falta de empatía provocada por nuestra tecnológica sociedad globalizada... este libro no puede leerse, a no ser que encuentres algún ejemplar perdido en una biblioteca o en alguna librería de ocasión, porque fue descatalogado hace ya algunos años. => Sigue leyendo la reseña en http://www.eltemplodelasmilpuertas.com"
Profile Image for John.
Author 538 books183 followers
July 2, 2010
This is volume #2 in a series of three; I read #3 (The Mists of Time) a couple of weeks ago and have yet to read volume #1. Very obviously, I am Just Not Doing It Right.

To be honest, between these two books at least, it doesn't matter that I've read them in the wrong order: the two are complementary accounts of the same tale. In Mists we follow the adventures of future girl Lara Avara as her gentle people, who have relocated from Nepal (or thereabouts) to Scotland after a climate-change-induced collapse of civilization, deal with a local and more primitive (i.e., more 20th-century in their thinking) bunch, the Barbaric Ones. Part of the tale is bound up with the arrival from 1979 or so by time warp of the children Robert and Jennifer. Circle is the relevant part of that tale as seen not by Lara Avara but by Robert and Jennifer (mainly Robert).

"Just a rehash?" I can here you think. "What a bore!"

In fact, the effect was enchanting, as bits and pieces of the other story blossomed out, giving me a fresh insight into both stories. I'm becoming a bit of a Margaret J. Anderson fan . . .
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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