Time's Agent

"All at once a meditation on motherhood, grief, war, environmental collapse, dread, and the nature of memory and time. I ate it up."—Lauren Groff, New York Times bestselling author

A multiverse story of love, loss, time travel, and final-stage capitalism from award-winning author Brenda Peynado.


Pocket World—a geographically small, hidden offshoot of our own reality, sped up or slowed down by time.

Following humanity’s discovery of pocket worlds, teams of academics embarked on groundbreaking exploratory missions, eager to study this new technology and harness the potential of a seemingly limitless horizon.

“What would you do, given another universe, a do-over?”

Archeologist Raquel and her wife, Marlena, once dreamed the pocket worlds held the key to solving the universe’s mysteries. But forty years later, pocket worlds are now controlled by corporations squeezing every penny out of all colonizable space and time, Raquel herself is in disgrace, and Marlena lives in her own pocket universe (that Raquel wears around her neck) and refuses to speak to her.

Standing in the ruins of her dream and her failed ideals, Raquel seizes one last chance to redeem herself and confront what it means to save something—or someone—from time.

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Published Aug 13, 2024

208 pages

Average rating: 6

2 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

hershyv
Sep 11, 2025
7/10 stars
Time's Agent is set in a future where humanity survives through "pocket worlds," fragile alternate spaces created to preserve culture and life. Raquel and her wife, Marlene, serve as agents responsible for researching and protecting these worlds until corporations take over and everything goes off the rails. This story is ambitious and packed with layers, exploring more than just time, science, or survival. It's also about people, flawed and real. The book weaves together cultural heritage, history, and a dystopian backdrop in a way that feels both beautiful and heavy. The themes are tough, but never hollow, and they feel valid, lived, and painfully close to our existing truths. The cultural elements and the science behind the world-building are super interesting, but there's definitely room for more depth and exploration. If you're into speculative sci-fi that's got heart, this one's definitely worth checking out.

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