Time and Again

The 50th anniversary edition of the beloved classic that Stephen King has called “THE great time-travel story.” Featuring a brand-new introduction by the New York Times bestselling author of Recursion, Blake Crouch.

When advertising artist Si Morley is recruited to join a covert government operation exploring the possibility of time travel, he jumps at the chance to leave his mundane 20th-century existence and step into the past. But he also has another motivation for going back in time: a half-burned letter that tells of a mysterious, tragic death and ominously of “fire which will destroy the whole world.”

Traveling to New York City in January 1882 to investigate, he finds a Manhattan teeming with a different kind of life, the waterfront unimpeded by skyscrapers, open-air markets packed with activity, Central Park bustling with horse drawn sleighs—a city on the precipice of great things. At first, Si welcomes these trips as a temporary escape but when he falls in love with a woman he meets in the past, he must choose whether to return to modern life or live in 1882 for good.

“Pure New York fun” (Alice Hoffman, New York Times bestselling author), Time and Again is meticulous recreation of New York in the late nineteenth century, exploring the possibilities of time travel to tell an ageless story of love, longing, and adventure. Finney’s magnum opus has been a source of inspiration for countless science fiction writers since its first publication in 1970.

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512 pages

Average rating: 7

19 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

CaroleLeigh
Aug 03, 2024
7/10 stars
Not a big time traveling fan but gave it a shot at the recommendation of another.
E Clou
May 10, 2023
8/10 stars
I tried to read this when I was a kid and I wasn't able to get through because I got bored, but the beautiful images of a man in long-ago New York stayed with me for decades, calling me back to finish it. I'm so glad I finally did.

It's a little weird as it requires no time machine or superpower to travel in time. And I was a little disappointed by the myopic view that the 1960s and 70s were so terrible compared with the 1880s when people constantly died of diseases and mishaps that were very much curable in the 1970s. But overall, it's full of so many beautiful descriptions of New York City, especially considering the 1960s descriptions are just as foreign to me as the 1880s descriptions. And there was some action and adventure about 2/3rds of the way through the book to keep it hopping. And the final ending was so casually twisted. I loved it.

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