Winner of four literary awards:
Readers’ Favorite International Book Awards – Bronze Medal Winner – Visionary Fiction
National Indie Excellence Awards – Finalist
SIBA Awards – Time Travel – 2nd Place
Independent Author Network – Book of the Year Awards -Finalist – Science Fiction
George is a middle-management, middle-class, middle-aged guy who hates his job and struggles to stay connected to … Fiction
George is a middle-management, middle-class, middle-aged guy who hates his job and struggles to stay connected to his wife and teenage children. Most guys might end up with a steamy affair and a flashy car for their midlife crises, but George gets a quirky philosophical physics professor named Shiloh. Trapped with this mysterious misfit on his morning commuter train, George is dragged into awkward conversations about love, fear, music, and the meaning of life. Shiloh also asks George to beta-test an app he wrote for the new Apple Watch–and with a free watch included, how could he say no?
When tragedy strikes, throwing George out of his uncomfortable comfort zone, he learns that Shiloh’s app lets him journey through alternate versions of his past. As challenges mount in his own reality, George must make a decision that will change him–and possibly the entire multiverse–forever.more
It took almost half of the book before I became hooked but from thereon it was quite a wonderful sci fi about the future of humanity and how individuals and time travel could play a part. Hang in past half-way point and see if you don’t agree that it becomes quite compelling.
Hard to follow where the story was going? Characters were confusing and to what purpose they served???
A little slow moving but interesting
I was not impressed with the main character and couldn’t really root for him. His family drew me in, but without that I would have not even finished the book.
An okay read, but the style is pretty much third person present that is reminiscent of cheap 1950’s detective novels or a 3rd grade book report.
Always- “George said” instead of “he said” or even conversational style.
Throws out a lot of factoids some of which are now obsolete, but nevertheless makes good points — the only reason to keep reading it as it challenges current thinking and politically correct assertions.
The character development is not deep– perhaps some of it purposely so – to keep it somewhat mysterious, but it does detract from the quality of the book.
Different take-on time travel
boring didn’t finish it