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The Rhythm of Time

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An Instant New York Times Bestseller

From the Academy Award–winning, Grammy-winning, and New York Times bestselling author Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson and the New York Times bestselling author S. A. Cosby comes this thrill-a-minute novel—the first in a rollicking time-travel adventure series that’s perfect for fans of Amari and the Night Brothers and Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky.


Seventh grader Rahim Reynolds loves testing out the gadgets invented by his brilliant friend Kasia Collins. First there were the X-ray glasses and all the trouble they caused. Now there’s the new cell phone she built for his birthday, even though his parents won’t let him have one. But Rahim is excited to use the phone to search for videos of his favorite old-school rap group. What he doesn’t know is the phone has a special battery that interfaces with a secret government satellite, which spells trouble when the phone transports him back to 1997. Almost immediately, he learns what every time traveler before him Actions in the past jeopardize the future. With Kasia as his only lifeline to the present, Rahim works with her to get home unscathed, all the while dodging bullies (on his end) and suspicious government agents (on hers).

Philadelphia in the late nineties is a new world for Rahim and Kasia, but it is a familiar place for Questlove, who, alongside S. A. Cosby, delivers a high-velocity tale where two best friends discover that sometimes the best beat is the one that brings you back home.

240 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 18, 2023

34 people are currently reading
5212 people want to read

About the author

Questlove

20 books123 followers
Ahmir K. Thompson (b. 1971), known professionally as Questlove, is an American musician, drummer, record producer, disc jockey, filmmaker, music journalist, and actor. He is the drummer and joint frontman (with Black Thought) for the hip hop band the Roots. Additionally, he is an adjunct professor at the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at New York University.

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5 stars
175 (28%)
4 stars
302 (49%)
3 stars
109 (17%)
2 stars
23 (3%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 123 reviews
Profile Image for Janae (The Modish Geek).
471 reviews51 followers
May 14, 2023
This was so much fun! It was fast-paced, funny, and relatable. And we love a young Black girl in STEM. If I read this right, it could be the beginning of a series and I'm here for it.

HIGHLY recommend, especially for the intended audience.
Profile Image for Ty.
555 reviews117 followers
June 26, 2023
This was a fun read! I loved the friendship between the main characters Rahim and Kasia. They both had very different interests, Rahim wanting to rap and Kasia being into technology yet they were able to connect as friends. This book brings up many topics that would be relatable to young readers such as bullying, peer pressure, following your dreams and the importance of friendship. The time travel aspect of the book was entertaining because we saw the impacts of what happens when a person goes back in time and how that could rewrite the future. The overall story was fast paced and had moments where you really felt for Rahim and just want him to win. I don’t pick up middle grade a lot, but if I can find more books like this, I will pick it up more often!
Profile Image for Gary Anderson.
Author 0 books102 followers
Read
May 30, 2023
The twelve-year-old kid who still lives somewhere inside me has a new favorite book: The Rhythm of Time by Questlove with S. A. Cosby. It has time travel, music fans, smart kids with rebellious streaks, and parents who understand “good trouble” and take the sides of their children against authority figures.

Rahim and Kasia are next-door neighbors and best friends. (There is no romance anywhere in sight, another plus for the twelve-year-old me.) Rahim is an aspiring rapper whose professor father despises technology. Kasia is a home-schooled technology genius who builds a phone for Rahim in spite of his father’s Luddite tendencies. Problems arise when Rahim searches for something on the phone, and he is bodily transported to his search results. That’s right; Kasia has unknowingly tapped into the super-secret government satellites that can bend space and time and hot-wired that ability into Rahim’s phone.

Rahim first uses the phone to get out of jams, but eventually he is transported to an earlier time of his Philadelphia neighborhood where he meets younger versions of people he knows very well. (No spoilers here.) Rahim finds that his love of ‘90s rap transcends time, and he has some adventures in fandom that help him better understand his life’s future version. (Questlove name-checks his own band The Roots at one point.)

In addition to the time travel elements inThe Rhythm of Time, the adult me also appreciates how Questlove and Cosby authentically present middle-class Black life. The parents of Rahim, Kasia, and young characters say and do things that probably would not happen in households of other races.

The fast pace, humor, and intriguing plot make The Rhythm of Time an ideal choice for middle-grade readers who like action, technology, speculative fiction, or music. The social justice threads and lack of romance may also appeal to certain readers. The only thing I didn’t like about The Rhythm of Time was the ending. Again, no spoilers here, but I wish authors wouldn’t do things like that.
Profile Image for Ronald.
1,456 reviews15 followers
June 25, 2023
This was a good read. Took a bit to get started or draw me into the story. It is a kids / YA book but much better than many of the other books I have read aimed at that demographic. The story assumes the reader is smart and not a dumb kid.

There are a few points that in other books I would complain about but will let go without comment. I am not a complete fan of this time travel butterfly effects just being random. Will there actually be another book and will this be a series?
Profile Image for Bookishrealm.
3,241 reviews6,440 followers
October 9, 2023
I'm always looking for new sci-fi books to check out especially those that are geared towards middle grade readers. While I was nervouse about Questlove writing this book, I think that the pairing with S.A. Cosby definitely made me more excited to dive into this one. I clearly have taken to long to write my review for this one since I finished it back in May, but I can say that it's well worth a read.
Profile Image for JL Salty.
2,005 reviews1 follower
October 11, 2023
Rating: pg for danger, adventure. No profanity, no sex. No violence
Recommend: 6th -9 - esp black and brown kids looking for stories with kids like them. Normal family, whole parental units, healthy friendships.

I loved this book adding to the genre of “not only white kids should get to do the fun stuff”.
Smart girl, boy understanding his dad better, both growing up a little bit. There is some disobedience, some lying, but all is clear and forgiven at the end. A good add to the collection.
Profile Image for Imara.
37 reviews1 follower
November 14, 2025
I feel really bad as an adult reading this book 2 stars, but that was my experience so take it with a grain of salt. There was so much happening, but nothing of impact at the same time. Most people stay away from time travel because it creates a bit of trouble. An example here is the main character goes back and meets his dad, then goes back to present day, AB’s the dad remembers the fake name he gave him while being his friend. Cool. How do you not remember that your SON looks exactly like the friend you had? How don’t you remember how you got into the concert?!

I think some things were used for gags then quickly forgotten. I loved Amari and the night brothers, but this was underwhelming
Profile Image for Charlotte.
1,447 reviews40 followers
June 8, 2023
a neat time travel story staring a young rapper and a genius girl who inadvertently creates a time travel device that sends the boy back to when his father was a kid. This puts the world in danger of utter temporal collapse, and makes for fun reading!
Profile Image for Kristen Harvey.
2,089 reviews260 followers
July 5, 2023
What a fun time travel story full of great moments and humor. I absolutely enjoyed seeing how things were messed up and the reason behind everything beginning. I can’t wait to see where the series goes next.
Profile Image for Rebecca McPhedran.
1,577 reviews83 followers
November 21, 2023
Ok, this one was really fun! A cool twist on Back to the Future. When Rahim’s best friend Kaisa gives him a phone that might actually be a Time Machine, their entire universe and the construct of time could be in serious trouble. This book was so good! I really enjoyed it!
Profile Image for Lisad.
100 reviews1 follower
June 6, 2023
So much fun! Fast-paced, engaging, yet still thought-provoking. Loved Kasia, who reminds me of Black Panther’s sister Shuri. Would love for this to be a series.
Profile Image for B C Asch.
25 reviews1 follower
May 9, 2024
Absolutely amazing and good for all ages!
Profile Image for Kaprisha.
425 reviews5 followers
May 13, 2023
This was a very good read have to make a movie and a 2nd book like big time
Profile Image for Hobart.
2,732 reviews87 followers
June 16, 2023
★ ★ ★ 1/2 (rounded up)
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
---
His dad. He was walking and talking with his dad. And his dad was...kinda cool? Rahim didn't know what was more shocking—the fact he had traveled back in time or that his dad was once actually pretty fun to be around.


WHAT'S THE RHYTHM OF TIME ABOUT?
Kasia is a homeschool nerd/computer genius. Her parents run a vegan co-op and help community gardens throughout the city. They know she's smarter than them, but they also know they don't fully appreciate how much smarter she is. For example, she's designed a drone that can adapt, speak, and add features as it sees fit. She's also made a (admittedly unattractive) smartphone for her best friend so he can call her and do homework.

Rahim lives next door to her and to call his father a Luddite is to understate things—and it'd probably result in a lecture from him about the inaccuracy of using the term for him. He's a history professor who won't allow computers, etc. in his home—his encyclopedias are good enough for Rahim's homework, thank you very much*. He's not that crazy about Rahim's love of music or sports, either.

* Sure, it's impossible in 2023 for even a grade school student to do homework without the Internet, we all know that. Shhh. Roll with it for the purposes of the book.

Rahim is overjoyed with his gift (although he does make a crack about its looks) and starts to use it right away. It takes him very little time to see that if he does things in a certain way, the phone will transport him instantly to various places. Kasia doesn't understand that, but before she can figure out how that happens, Rahim discovers (the hard way) that the phone also works to send him to the past.

While Kasia tries to figure out how to get him home, she tells him to keep from interacting with anyone as much as possible. She starts trying to see what the satellites she hacked into to give Rahim his phone are doing to him and Rahim sees a kid about his age being bullied and before common sense can restrain him, he intervenes and saves the kid. The bullied kid turns out to be Omar, or as Rahim calls him, "Dad."

Oops.

And well...things get worse from there.

THE TAKE ON TIME TRAVEL
Time itself is being pulled and stretched, and I'm kinda afraid it's gonna crumble like graham crackers dunked in milk.

Like any self-respecting time-travel story, particularly one where the traveler meets a relative, things start to unravel—the timeline, future events, etc. And not just in the expected ways—the first sign we have that anything's going wrong is that a different team wins the '97 NBA Championship. There's no relation to anyone in the book to anyone in the NBA (that the reader knows of), so the problems in the timeline aren't starting out in the typical way. The authors deserve some big points for that.

Nor do the time travel-induced anomalies continue to play out the way they usually do. It's when things are nearing their worst that Kasia says that about graham crackers in milk (a visual that has stuck with me for days).

(Mild Spoilers ahead in this paragraph) Some things remain constant—Rahim's parents still get together and live next to Kasia and her family. Kasia's just as smart, too (thankfully). And just when you start to think that maybe, just maybe, we're going to get a Back to the Future kind of ending where things went differently for Rahim's father and he found a different kind of success—but Rahim (for reasons you might not expect) decides to try a plan-so-crazy-that-it-just-might-work to restore the timeline. Emphasis on the might.

THE GOVERNMENT TYPES
Disrupting, disturbing, distracting, and potentially disabling Kasia's efforts are a couple of government agents. They seem like moderately overzealous, humorless types who are trying to do their job—if it happens to allow them to bully a little girl, so be it.

Eventually, however, these agents prove to be better than we think. In doing so they show that some of the government assets that Kasia has been, um, "helping" herself to aren't exactly what she thinks they are. In fact, there's a connection between them and The Philadelphia Experiment. But we're not just treated to the typical urban legend version of the Philadelphia Experiment, Questlove and Cosby give the reader a Hidden Figures version of it. Which makes it all the more fun.

But just because there are all sorts of adults running around with official powers and equipment, don't think that it all doesn't come down to what Kasia and Rahim do. This is a Middle-Grade novel, after all.

SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT THE RHYTHM OF TIME?
It just felt so odd to be having so much fun on just about every page with Cosby's name on the cover. I enjoy his stuff, but it's not often that "fun" enters into the conversation. And fun is the best word to describe this.

The whole concept and the way it plays out are ridiculous—but they're entertaining, and if you can accept any part of it, you'll accept it all. And there's no reason not to suspend your disbelief enough to buy into the story—because it's not trying to be more than a fun adventure for grade school readers.* So just sit back, relax, grab some popcorn, and enjoy.

* Even if it had higher aspirations, you could still make the case for going along with things.

Rahim's a great guy, and you can see where Omar ends up becoming the Dad that he is—and how his parents become the versions of themselves Rahim would come to know as his grandparents. All of that was really well done.

Kasia is the type of impossible genius making tech in her bedroom that has been the stuff of cartoons and Middle-Grade fiction since I was reading it (when it was called "Juvenile Fiction.") Think Flavia de Luce meets Penny from Inspector Gadget meets Richie Foley (from Static Shock). I will read something about her anytime. If Rahim's along for the ride, so much the better.

The book ends with a clear sign that the story goes on, but none of the online sources I see refer to this as the first of a series. I hope it does go on—but it's also one of those endings that doesn't require a sequel. We know that Rahim and Kasia are going to be up to more adventures, and in a way, that's enough. By this point, the reader has enough to know how their adventures will go.

But I really hope the series keeps going.

Pick this up for some nice, uncomplicated fun for yourself or grab it for the Middle Schooler in your life (and then borrow it).
Profile Image for Sacha.
1,927 reviews
December 23, 2025
4 stars

Though this book was first published in 2023, I only learned about that today, when I started what I thought was a totally new book being published in 2026. The good news? This is the start of a trilogy and it ends with a cool cliffhanger, so I'm thrilled not to have to wait long to get more out of this story!

Rahim and Kasia are pals and, apparently, geniuses. There's some really cool time travel happening, and in the tradition of all kids in sci fi, these two must make sure not to change the entire course of humanity - or, okay, even what happens to the people they know - during their adventures. But seriously, could YOU resist all of the things you'd want to change and people you'd want to meet...?

The most exciting part of this novel is the relationship between the two aforementioned characters. Their circumstances test them, and they have to learn how to manage their impulses and think about others, even in the face of real temptation and legitimately unusual circumstances. Also, while they do break some rules, I love that the adults around these two are generally supportive of them and believe in their brains. The adults are not clued all the way in, but they consistently support their kids, and that's pretty special in itself.

This was a fun read that I'll share with my students, and I am excited to jump right into the sequel!

*Special thanks to NetGalley and Square Fish for this arc, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.

**Round #2 read: Audiobook thanks to Macmillan Young Listeners. Highly recommend this option when and where available!
Profile Image for Jake Chavez.
221 reviews1 follower
June 5, 2023
Set-up to be a sequel. Lots of holes in the plot as well as an unsatisfying ending.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
1,531 reviews24 followers
January 10, 2024
What worked:
The simplicity of the plot quickly becomes much more complicated. Rahim is accidentally transported to 1997 and his sole motivation is getting back to the present without disrupting history. Fortunately for young readers, Rahim fails miserably when it comes to being unnoticed after he befriends Omar, his future father. The most interesting aspect of the story is how Rahim gets to see a different side of the adults in his life. His father, uncle, and grandparents display young lives that are in stark contrast to the adults he’s grown up with. Adults often have dreams and interests as kids that they’re forced to give up when they start careers and families. Rahim is able to witness the changes in people he knows and it affects his understanding of them in the end.
Kasia is Rahim’s home-schooled, best friend and neighbor and she’s a technological genius. She builds a cell phone that ties into government satellites and accidentally transports Rahim into the past. She also builds a small drone that can follow less specific instructions and can become invisible by going into stealth mode. Her bedroom looks like a computer geek’s dream until government agents confiscate all of her equipment. Career scientists and Noble prize winners spend lifetimes trying to understand transporting and time travel but twelve-year-old Kasia successfully masters the concepts. Her conversations with 1997 Rahim contribute humor to the book.
Young readers may connect with the musical references throughout the whole story. Rahim comes up with freestyle verses and he loves an older-generation group Four the Hard Way, an actual band. Rahim gets favorable responses when he posts one of his songs but its success makes him the target of the school bully. Traveling to the past opens Rahim’s eyes to the fact that his father and uncle share his interest in music. Weaving the culture of this music into a successful adventure through time travel requires creative talent from the author.
What didn’t work as well:
Believability is a challenging part of this book. Much of the story is reasonable, in a speculative fiction manner, but some of Kasia’s creations are a stretch. Even if she comes up with innovative ideas, how does she amass the materials to actually pull them off? Also, the appearance of vortexes creates suspense but they allow the characters plenty of time to resolve the problem.
The final verdict:
Helping a young person develop an understanding of the adults in his life is the most endearing part of the book. It addresses the paradoxes of time travel head-on resulting in an entertaining adventure into the past. I recommend you give this book a shot.
Profile Image for Justin Barrow.
Author 2 books1 follower
August 21, 2024
“The Rhythm of Time” by Questlove with S.A. Cosby – 2-Stars

SPOILERS: This review contains MINOR spoilers. These spoilers won’t have a major impact on your reading. Most of the information is shared within the synopsis of the book here on Goodreads.

TRIGGER WARNINGS: None

2-STAR REVIEW: Let me preface this review with the fact that I am not the target demographic for this fantastical tale involving time travel. This is a book designed for middle school children, and I am a 40-year-old man, so I am not sure how relevant this will be.

I have been a huge fan of S.A. Cosby, and I went into this knowing that this wasn’t going to be a staple Cosby book.

“The Rhythm of Time” has a lot going, I am not sure if it is a lot going for it, or just a lot going, but either way, like this sentence, it’s a lot. Imagine the classic Back to the Future movie, but replace Marty McFly with Rahim and Doc Brown with Kasia, replace the DeLorean with a cellular phone, and make the time travel all accidental and include the United States government and secret satellites. It’s all very convoluted, and there isn’t a Michael J. Fox level talent available to hold it all together.

The first problem with this novel is it is littered with plot holes. It also struggles with pacing and jumps all over the pace. All these things make it a tough read, or listen, especially for its intended audience. It appears that Questlove and Cosby had a basic idea and left it murky and unfinished.

The novel attempts to raise the tension, but it is not believable when the teenagers involved opt for concerts and naps instead of trying to fix the problem…but, then again, they are teenagers, so it is completely possible. Maybe I should remove this portion of my review.

The one really bright spot for this story was a positive representation of minority characters and family dynamics. Both Rahim and Kasia have very supportive families with parents with educated and well-deserved jobs. This highlights hard working members of society and presents minorities as supportive, loving, and accomplished parents.

For me, this is a 2-Star book. It was tough to follow, the plot and pace continually changing. I do believe this is a quality story 3-Star for kids aged 11-14.

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QUALIFICATIONS: This review is brought to you by BarrowBookReviews on Instagram.
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Profile Image for Janice.
2,183 reviews2 followers
July 17, 2023
Rahim loves rap music especially an old school group. He is making his own music on the sly because Dad doesn’t let him have electronics. His best friend, Kasia, a genius, is also his recording producer. Kasia build Rahim a cell phone so he can get internet, etc. She ties it to a government satellite so no fees. But this cell phone transports Rahim to different places and times. When he sends himself back to see his favorite rap group’s first concert in Philly, he gets stuck. It doesn’t help that the government has tracked Kasia and confiscated her equipment before she can get him back. Rahim has trouble in his timeline from a bully named Man Man because Rahim’s song for a contest was better than his.

While back in time, Rahim steps up when another kid is getting bullied because he can relate. The other kid being bullied is Omar, Rahim’s dad. As Rahim breaks more of the time traveling rules, more things go wonky. Rahim ends up in a timeline that’s nothing like the one he left.

So they fix it. And the reason I couldn’t give this book 5 stars. It felt rushed and not explained well -- the fix, I mean. Everything else felt like it had been better planned. Although the set up for book 2 was well done.

This one kept me reading when I should have been doing other things. It was good.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
1,063 reviews
April 15, 2025
Grade level 4-6

I've said that if S. A. Cosby writes it, I'll read it. The Rhythm of Time proves that to be true. I'm obviously not in the demographic for whom it's meant, unless that demographic is "avid reader." Whatever, I enjoyed the step back in time.

Best friends Rahim and Kasia live next door to each other. Bona fide genius Kasia builds a cell phone for Rahim, since his parents won't give him one. She taps into secret government technology to make it work and, lo and behold, taps into time travel. At that point, the narrative veers into back-to-the future (movie) trouble as Rahim ends up time-traveling to 1997 and befriending the boy who will eventually become his father. Getting Rahim back to his own time doesn't go smoothly. And therein you have the story. Overall, fun stuff.

Since I nearly dropped my rating to three stars, I feel the need to mention why. All was good till the end and then what ... set up for a sequel? Know when to leave well enough alone, guys. For the record, The Rhythm of Time was published two years ago. As far as I can tell, no sequel is in the works which means the reader is left hanging.
Profile Image for BookSinArt.
696 reviews7 followers
July 13, 2025
Started: 2.13.25
Finished: 5.11.25
~The Rhythm of Time by Questlove and S.A. Cosby | #hardcover
~Illustrated by: Godwin Akpan
#JayBookSin2025Boal Book.52
#LuccaBook

SynopSin: This was such a clever and enjoyable read. S.A. Cosby has quickly become one of my fave authors, so when I saw he did this with Questlove, I was like, hell yes!
I read it to my son (9yrs old) and he loved it. It took him a couple of chapters to get into it, but once he did he didn’t want me to stop reading it. It was always, just one more chapter. Please! Of course I was all like, as you wish.
1 chap turned to 2, and on some nights, 3.
The time travel and the consequences to making changes in the past threw him off a bit which is why he gave it 4 1/2 instead of 5.
It’s a fun read for kids and adults.

Lucca Rating: 📚📚📚📚 1/2
JBSR: 📚📚📚📚
Illustrations: 📚📚📚📚📚

#booksinart73 #staybookedhappyreading #keepturningpages #booknerd #bookworm #bookdragon #booksquirrel #bibliophile #bookstagram #bookstagrammer #bookthreads #booktok

Instagram: BookSin.Art73
Profile Image for Maria.
226 reviews
December 26, 2025
Rahim's dad doesn't embrace technology all that much, so his best friend Kasia, a computer genius, builds him a phone and sets it up to "steal" service from a couple of government satellites that she hacked so he won't have to pay a cellular bill. What they don't know is that the satellite is used to experiment on teleportation/time travel (via the Philadelphia Project), and Rahim accidentally time travels back to 1997, and doesn't know how to get back. Luckily, he runs into his father (who, in 1997, is Rahim's age), and finds a safe haven with him. Until things start to unravel, and chaos ensues.

This is a adventure-packed, middle-grade book is a great read. The characters are well-formed and the relationships are dynamic.. I think kids will really enjoy this one.

I did not love the narrator, He's fine when reading the dialogue, but when reading the narration it seems like he's shouting to keep his vocal energy up. He does well pacing the story, and giving characters individual voices.

I received an ARC of this audiobook from #NetGalley.
Profile Image for Deborah Zeman.
1,044 reviews37 followers
April 1, 2023
Great story that showcases the butterfly effect when playing with time-travel and how it can effect both the future and the past. Lesson to be learned: don’t play with the timelines.

Loved the characters of Rahim and Kasia; Kasia is true genius and STEM girl. The introduction of Dr. Jackson from the Philadelphia Experiment was interesting but after further research, I couldn’t find any info about her or the “Black Rosies” of the project. An added touch to the whole time travel piece of the story, just a bit inconsistent. Doesn’t take away from the story.

Lots of technology used in the book and the possibility of time-travel via cellphones is intriguing and a story line that I don’t recall reading before.

As you read the book, you wonder why Rahim’s dad is so against technology, that he’s all about the books. You definitely come to learn his why.

I look forward to seeing the completed book with the corresponding illustrations.
Profile Image for Matt Glaviano.
1,403 reviews24 followers
April 24, 2023
Copy I read was an ARC - no art present (except the dumb cover), but cool pages describing what the art would depict when finished ("Illustration: Kasia saves Iago while agents get hot dogs").

Questlove has been a hero of mine for a long time. Of course I'm gonna read a Questlove J Fict novel.

Forula: take Sal and Gabi. Add in time travel and some Back to the Future vibes. Throw in 90s Philadelphia and... voila.

I didn't find a ton to celebrate or to disparage in this book. Kasia was underutilized - she didn't have a lot to work with and it was a shame.

The writing was functional but not too special. The dialogue didn't always come across that well - it felt canned.

The best part was probably the 90s Philadelphia setting. That was more unique and lived in than any other aspect of this book.

The end... was rough. I'm glad the whole book didn't just feel like it was setting up for sequel... but it sure felt tacked on at the end of this one.

Profile Image for Karen.
1,709 reviews13 followers
December 30, 2023
Rahim lives in Philadelphia next door to his tech-genius best friend Kasia who is home-schooled and has all the latest and greatest computing tools at her fingertips. Rahim has no cellphone, no television, no video games, and no computer because his professor father didn’t need all that tech when he was younger. Kasia makes a cellphone for Rahim and hacks into satellites to get free cell service. Unfortunately, she also managed to hack the space/time continuum because Rahim’s cellphone allows him to teleport and time travel. Just after he returns to the 1990s and meets up with his own father as a middle schooler, government agents catch on to the hack and confiscate Kasia’s computers. Will Rahim make it back to his own timeline? Will he change the course of history? Most importantly, will he find a way to attend a concert of his favorite 1990s rap group? I hope there is a sequel to this fun – and at times funny – sci-fi adventure!
Profile Image for Pam Bales.
2,526 reviews12 followers
May 22, 2023
My, oh my. I picked this up because I was intrigued with Questlove and when he and S A Cosby appeared on Jimmy Fallon as guests, instead of Questlove being on the drums, the duo introduced this book. Yes, it's Young Adult, but that doesn't stop older people from enjoying it. I decided I had to read this and S A Cosby's books as well. Best sci-fi I've read in ages, and I've read a lot. Set in Philadelphia home of The Roots, a couple of "misfit" kids manage to change the world as we know it. Teleporting, bullying, friendship, hip-hop, time travel, FBI intervention, the butterfly effect, an exciting mention of the Roots, and a reminder that everyone, no matter age, should reach for the stars and follow all their dreams. These and much more cumulate in a rip-roaring good read. Plus, wait for it - it has a cliffhanger. Highly recommend.
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