Replay

by Ken Grimwood | Science Fiction & Fantasy |
ISBN: 068816112x Global Overview for this book
Registered by wingperryfranwing of Elk Grove, California USA on 6/7/2013
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This book is in the wild! This Book is Currently in the Wild!
2 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by wingperryfranwing from Elk Grove, California USA on Friday, June 7, 2013
I read this a few years ago and loved it. See this JE for my prior review - I also sent this out as a bookray. This is an extra copy for release.


From Library Journal
The possibility of traveling back in time to relive one's life has long fascinated science fiction writers. Without a single gesture toward an explanation, this mainstream novel recounts the story of a man and a woman mysteriously given the ability to live their lives over. Each dies in 1988 only to awaken as a teenager in 1963 with adult knowledge and wisdom intact and the ability to make a new set of choices. Different spouses, lovers, children, careers, await them in each go-round of the past 25 years, as well as slightly altered versions of world events. Their deep commitment to one another continues through the centuries of their many lifetimes. This delightful and completely engrossing story will appeal to a wide variety of readers.

See reviews at Amazon.com

Journal Entry 2 by wingperryfranwing at emmejo's Otherworldly Bookbox, A Bookbox -- Controlled Releases on Monday, June 10, 2013

Released 10 yrs ago (6/10/2013 UTC) at emmejo's Otherworldly Bookbox, A Bookbox -- Controlled Releases

CONTROLLED RELEASE NOTES:

Adding this one to the Otherworldly bookbox.

Journal Entry 3 by wingGoryDetailswing at Nashua, New Hampshire USA on Saturday, June 22, 2013
I'm claiming this from the Otherworldly bookbox. Looks like an interesting twist on the time-travel concept.

Later: I really enjoyed this book, though one could debate whether it actually is about time travel or is about memory - or, of course, both.

It begs a comparison to The Time Traveler's Wife, as both stories deal with relationship issues and, in part, with somewhat unsettling older-man-with-young-girl scenes, but the time-travel mechanics are very different; Henry only lives one life, one time-stream, but he lives it out of order, while Jeff lives the same chronological 25 years over and over. [Another time-travel novel that this one brought to mind was The Man Who Folded Himself, in which the main character could leap backwards or forwards in time at will; while the viewpoint character only had a single lifetime, he was able to learn from his parallel-universe selves, which kept spawning with every new leap he made...]

This novel opens with the line "Jeff Winston was on the phone with his wife when he died," and immediately dumps Jeff 25 years back into his own college-age self, a situation both traumatic and - once he realized what was going on - rather fascinating. And it raised major nostalgia in me, as I recalled very clear scenes from my own college days (a good deal more than 25 years ago now!). I wondered whether I'd be able to fit back into my life then - would I remember things like addresses and phone numbers, basic navigate-the-world skills in those pre-internet days? Would I remember the names of friends long out of touch? Would I be able to cut it in classes on subjects I hadn't dealt with in decades?

The book takes Jeff through several iterations of his life, a bewildering syndrome that, he muses, might be some kind of mental lapse - that is, he's imagining the whole thing in the moment of his death, or perhaps is dreaming it all - or might be some cosmic joke/lesson/punishment. The first time through he plays with his future knowledge, becoming insanely wealthy (and using surprising judgement to avoid being targeted by gangsters!), and dabbling in changing a major historical event - only to find that he couldn't make significant global changes, at least not the way he was going about it.

When the replay happens again he begins to get scared; if it's not a one-time thing, what's he supposed to do with the same 25 years to live through yet again? The choices he makes in each new iteration intrigued me, a kind of "Groundhog's Day"-loop where he can acquire and retain knowledge from each replay but where nobody else does. Until he spots clear evidence that he's not the only one...

I thoroughly enjoyed the alternate lives he chose to live, and was surprised at the changes in each iteration. I'm sure that everyone who enjoys speculative fiction (and many who don't) have wondered what they'd do if they could re-live their lives knowing what they know now, and this book touches on many of those choices, sometimes with very happy results and sometimes with disastrous ones.

I wondered how the story could possibly end, and wasn't disappointed with the way it did, though there's certainly room for many alternate resolutions - and it's left to the reader to interpret just what really is going on and why. Very entertaining story!

[There's a TV Tropes page on the novel, where I learned that the author died before writing a sequel.]

Journal Entry 4 by wingGoryDetailswing at Rest Area on I495 in Chelmsford, Massachusetts USA on Saturday, August 3, 2013

Released 10 yrs ago (8/3/2013 UTC) at Rest Area on I495 in Chelmsford, Massachusetts USA

WILD RELEASE NOTES:

I plan to leave this book at the southbound rest station off I-495 in Chelmsford at about 2; hope the finder enjoys it!

*** Released as part of the 2013 One Word Title release challenge. ***

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