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lady_schrapnell ([personal profile] lady_schrapnell) wrote2006-12-10 08:31 pm
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Time Runners, by Justin Richards

Just FYI - 'A book in the Time Runners series' - though even this isn't yet published. Does that kind of thing annoy anyone else? End of rhetorical questioning...

Picked up this ARC at the IBBY conference, and have already griped just a wee bit about the promised distribution of wristwatches to boy's magazines as part of the release publicity. But for the record, I'm just rather sour on behalf of some of my favourite authors who don't get this kind of publicity and deserve it if any book does. I was actually impressed with Simon & Schuster, as the only publisher (of fiction) to have a stand at the IBBY, with a few books fitting the theme of the conference for sale or free distribution. And the editor (of at least Gideon the Cutpurse) herself there and personning said stand. Nice!

I just wish the book had lived up to its promise a bit more. Main character initially is Jamie Grant, a normal kid with a normal family and not too many friends in his new school, who discovers he's fallen through a time break and has ceased to exist. I've no idea if it's just me, but the situation this kid faced - his gradual erasure from the memory and recognition of, and eventually even visibility to, his own family, seemed just terrifying. That aspect I found extremely gripping. And the treatment of time in general, and time travel in particular, was complex and intriguing, rather than cursory and let's-get-on-with-the-adventure-ish.

Pity about the characterisation. Or perhaps the fact that there was essentially none. Jamie was mostly irritating - rejecting the explanations and help offered by Anna (a girl who was lost decades before) as just her being a stupid and annoying girl, Anna was mostly a 'sad smile', and even the villain rather boringly villainous. That last was more frustrating than the others in a way, because the Baddies (Undoers, I think) were given interestingly possibilities: some of them were said to be prepared to accept the erasing of individuals in order to prevent some huge tragedy of history, like a war. But the individual Baddie with whom Jamie and Anna struggled, Darkling Midnight, just wants to end human history for the sake of it. Yawn.

I also wondered whether one of the rules of time travel in the book - that nobody could return to the same time in the past more than once - wasn't broken. Anna couldn't go back to a day she'd already visited in order to sort things out, but Jamie visited the same day several times - though maybe there's an escape-clause in its not being the exact same minute he visited each time.

Perhaps it's naive to hope that subsequent books might do more with the characters involved - like give them a touch of personality - but I can easily see myself reading to find out. Especially as the next, Rewind Assassain, (out this summer) takes Jamie and Anna back to 1596. And even more likely if they provide a free copy (with or without wrist-watch) along with my boys' magazine....

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2006-12-10 09:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I just finished this last night. I agree with pretty much everything you said, good and bad - so won't repeat it. But I was struck by the way in which Anna seemed (in her very first conversation with Jamie) to be amazed at his having a computer in his room, as if she had arrived on his doorstep with a 1950s mindset - whereas in fact we learn that she's been zipping back and forth through history, including her own future, for decades. This seemed like a first-draft fossil, to me.

So they're going back to 1596 next, eh? (Can encounters with the Bard and Good Queen Bess be far behind?) Presumably at some point they'll travel into Jamie's future, too - I'll be interested to see how he handles that.

I wonder if this person is a DWJ fan? The set-up seemed like a curious mix of The Homeward Bounders (even the hero's name) and A Tale of Time City. But that's probably my own parochialism showing.

[identity profile] lady-schrapnell.livejournal.com 2006-12-11 07:26 am (UTC)(link)
Good point about Anna and her amazement! I'd put her mindset at more 1970s, as she knew all about computers, but just the bedroom bit surprised her, but either way, it hardly makes sense. Even if she hadn't been in anyone's room in the 21st century, she could hardly have missed the advertising or shop windows!

And now I'm all amazement at your cleverness in thinking of Bardly encounters! Apparently the assassin of the title is after our Will, which could be fun.

Re. Jamie

[identity profile] scholars-blog.livejournal.com 2007-01-17 04:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if calling the main character Jamie isn't a tribute to Doctor Who since Richards writes Doctor Who novels, and one of the companions of the second Doctor (played by Patrick Troughton) companions was called Jamie (and played by an impossibly young Frazer Hines !) ?