Hmm. Are you alright with a children’s book? I liked **11 Birthdays: A Wish Novel** by Wendy Mass. The protagonist repeats her birthday multiple times until she and her friend find out the reason why.
Slartibartfast39 on
The Tesseract by Alex Garland. No time travel but told in a nonlinear way as I recall that brings together different people’s stories. “The lives of three very different groups of people–gangsters on the streets of Manila, middle-class suburban families, and a group of street children and the psychologist studying them–intertwine in an intricately woven tale, set in the Philippines, that spans three generations.”
mendizabal1 on
Talking it over, J. Barnes
KezzaK2608 on
Life after Life by Kate Atkinson
LiterarilyFine on
Trust by Hernan Diaz does this very well (that being the same story from different PoV’s)
GapDry7986 on
Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore is a great time loop story. There are also fantastic YA and middle grades that do time loops as well.
moonwillow60606 on
You may want to check out these three books by Emily St John Mandel.
* Station Eleven
* The Glass Hotel
* Sea of Tranquility
The three books take place in alternate versions of reality, but there are characters and themes that move across the books and Sea of Tranquility has a time travel / loop element to it. I loved all three books.
MelnikSuzuki on
All You Need is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka is Military SF about a fresh out-of-boot camp private who dies in his first battle against the aliens that are invading Earth, only to wake up the day before the battle. Again. Again. And again.
forthehopeofitall13 on
I just finished this book and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it!!! Slightly different in terms of POV but you should checkout Dark Matter (Blake Crouch) if you haven’t yet!
9 Comments
Hmm. Are you alright with a children’s book? I liked **11 Birthdays: A Wish Novel** by Wendy Mass. The protagonist repeats her birthday multiple times until she and her friend find out the reason why.
The Tesseract by Alex Garland. No time travel but told in a nonlinear way as I recall that brings together different people’s stories. “The lives of three very different groups of people–gangsters on the streets of Manila, middle-class suburban families, and a group of street children and the psychologist studying them–intertwine in an intricately woven tale, set in the Philippines, that spans three generations.”
Talking it over, J. Barnes
Life after Life by Kate Atkinson
Trust by Hernan Diaz does this very well (that being the same story from different PoV’s)
Oona Out of Order by Margarita Montimore is a great time loop story. There are also fantastic YA and middle grades that do time loops as well.
You may want to check out these three books by Emily St John Mandel.
* Station Eleven
* The Glass Hotel
* Sea of Tranquility
The three books take place in alternate versions of reality, but there are characters and themes that move across the books and Sea of Tranquility has a time travel / loop element to it. I loved all three books.
All You Need is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka is Military SF about a fresh out-of-boot camp private who dies in his first battle against the aliens that are invading Earth, only to wake up the day before the battle. Again. Again. And again.
I just finished this book and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it!!! Slightly different in terms of POV but you should checkout Dark Matter (Blake Crouch) if you haven’t yet!