Monday, 7 August 2017

11.22.63 - The hazards of time travel!

Jake Epping, a high school teacher from Maine, is moving forward with his life following a messy divorce. While at his local diner, Al, friend and owner, reveals that he is terminally ill, and asks Jake to complete a mission he has been working on for many years. This mission is to prevent the assassination of John F. Kennedy in Dallas, 1963. Al believes if he can prevent this, then the world would be changed for the better and would not be in the state it is currently in. Nice theory, but that was 50 years ago! Not a problem it would seem, as Al's diner is sitting on a time bubble which, when you step through, takes you back to exactly the same time, place and date in 1958. Al has spent years in the past, planning and investigating ... to make sure that the conspiracy theorists are all wrong, and that Lee Harvey Oswald was indeed a lone gunman. Jake is finally persuaded when he realises he can also save someone he knows from a dreadful fate that happened to them during the same time period. He steps through the bubble and we enter a new world with Jake as our narrator. But the past doesn't want to be changed and it begins to fight back in ever increasingly brutal ways. 11.22.63 is a fantastically complex and thought provoking novel, with great characters, especially Jake and his love interest, Sadie (big up for school librarians). It feels exceptionally well researched and the passages set in the 50s and early 60s are full of details which evoke a time and place that could almost be a different planet. Author Stephen King gives the reader a masterclass in this time-travelling fantasy which reads like an historical thriller. It will take up many, many, MANY hours of your time reading it, but it is definitely time well spent. I read the audio version, narrated by Craig Watson, who must have been exhausted. And if you take one lesson from this book, it's Don't Mess With History, you might not like the result! The only other thing left to say is READ IT!

My STAR rating: FIVE!

Length: 1120 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.36 (bargain for a book of this magnitude, thanks Audible!)
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, MP3 CD, CD-ROM, ebook.

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