Centuries ago, the Time of Troubles left Earth shattered and nearly empty. But a few survivors in Central Asia and returnees from Luna City hung on to bring the human race back to life. Now the Government of the Universe is spread out among hundreds of worlds. Genghis Khan is idolized as the Great Unifier of Humanity, and democracy is a long-forgotten notion. Old racial and religious divisions have been swept away by the rising oceans which lap around the Appalachian Islands, and peace abounds throughout the stars. Into this glorious golden age comes a new threat. Scientists in the World City of Ulanor have created a wormhole generator-a machine which can send people into the past. A band of Old Believers, bleeding hearts, and other malcontents who call themselves "the Crux" have captured the generator to undertake the greatest humanitarian mission of all time: to stop the Time of Troubles by assassinating the man responsible, the legendary Minister Destruction. Of course, Crux has to be stopped. Even the smallest change to the past will destroy the future-and the Controller of Earth won't stand for that. The agents of the Office for the Exploration of the Past-Pastplor-work to thwart Crux and other sociopaths, criminals, and do-gooders who would jeopardize the fragile peace so hard won. Their missions spanning a wide array of vividly imagined futures, Pastplor's agents protect the past from those who would dare to meddle. The time-travelers are hailed as saviors of humanity-but cannot escape the feeling that they're on the wrong side of the war. Schemes, betrayals, adventure, and satire blend in this delightful debut novel in the spirit of Poul Anderson's classic Time Patrol stories and Fritz Leiber's "The Big Time." Albert E. Cowdrey is a bold new voice in science fiction.
This is a story about a future present totalitarian state where conformity, arrest, and torture are commonplaces. The plot revolves around the creation of a wormhole device that enables time travel...a threat to the existing order of things. What follow are multiple attempts by various persons to go back in time to prevent a war that occasions the future present police state. The characters are reasonably well-developed, though at times they border on the cartoonish. We do see a few human touches intermixed with internecine power struggles and cruelty, and the heroes are sufficiently imperfect that most readers will probably be able to relate to them. The ending gives some satisfaction, though framed and underlined by much of the tragedy that suffuses this novel. It's a good read, though not a spectacular one.
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