It depends what you liked about it but if you want more multiverse then you should try Dark Matter
GuruNihilo on
Stephen King’s **11/22/63** is about a man going back in time in an attempt to prevent the assassination of JFK.
ConcertinaTerpsichor on
I loved the fact that the group’s protective muscle gets wiped out almost immediately after they land, and I loved the ending as they gaze on the tomb of their friend.
Almost anything by Crichton has interesting bits in it, even his lesser known stuff and his non-fiction. I liked Eaters of The Dead very much. It’s got Beowulf AND medieval Arabs.
It’s a YA book but DaVinci’s Cat, by Catherine Murdoch has some of the same flavor.
It’s a cliche to recommend it these days, but the Murderbot Diaries series is very intelligent and entertaining.
UF1977 on
SM Stirling just dropped the first book in a new series, *To Turn the Tide.* A group of American classicists are recruited by an Austrian physicist for a mysterious project. Turns out it’s a time-travel program, but they escape in the time machine just ahead of the outbreak of WWIII, Vienna is vaporized, and the physicist dies in the chaos. The historians wind up in the Roman Empire of the mid-2nd century AD, with no idea of why they were sent there.
4 Comments
It depends what you liked about it but if you want more multiverse then you should try Dark Matter
Stephen King’s **11/22/63** is about a man going back in time in an attempt to prevent the assassination of JFK.
I loved the fact that the group’s protective muscle gets wiped out almost immediately after they land, and I loved the ending as they gaze on the tomb of their friend.
Almost anything by Crichton has interesting bits in it, even his lesser known stuff and his non-fiction. I liked Eaters of The Dead very much. It’s got Beowulf AND medieval Arabs.
It’s a YA book but DaVinci’s Cat, by Catherine Murdoch has some of the same flavor.
It’s a cliche to recommend it these days, but the Murderbot Diaries series is very intelligent and entertaining.
SM Stirling just dropped the first book in a new series, *To Turn the Tide.* A group of American classicists are recruited by an Austrian physicist for a mysterious project. Turns out it’s a time-travel program, but they escape in the time machine just ahead of the outbreak of WWIII, Vienna is vaporized, and the physicist dies in the chaos. The historians wind up in the Roman Empire of the mid-2nd century AD, with no idea of why they were sent there.