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Cargando... Doing Timepor Jodi Taylor
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I love Jodi Taylor's books. They are fun and funny and pure escapism, with a lot of very interesting history mixed in. This book starts a new set of stories of wild time travellers and I can't wait to see where they go next and what they get up to. ( ) Mathew doesn't make his parents happy with his choice to join the Time Police, Luke's father bribes the TP into taking his spoiled troublesome son, and Jane is just looking for a way to survive after running away from her ogre of a grandmother. The Time Police want Mathew's special talents and don't expect much of Luke or Jane except that they'll fail quickly enough not to cause too much damage. When very little goes exactly according to expectations things get interesting if not quite in the St. Mary's over-the-top, under-the-carpet way. A fun romp through time. I loved lots of the little one-liners- I wonder if one of the main characters is named Luke solely so the author could use the line "Luke, I am your father"? The joy of one of these stories is not in the huge historic events but in watching the interactions of all the characters. The invention of time travel led to the Time Wars, which led to the Time Police, who solve problems by ruthless, thorough, application of force. Stop the illegal time travelers, bring home for prosecution any who are unaccountably still alive, and burn what's left. The Time Police have a rival, or nemesis, St. Mary's who, they will assure you don't do time travel. That would be illegal. They study major historical events in contemporary time. The earliest (in internal chronological order) of the St. Mary's Chronicles is The Very First Damned Thing (Chronicles of St. Mary's 0.5) It's very easy to see why the rules-oriented Time Police aren't fond of the scholarly and chaotic St. Mary's crew. In this first of the Time Police stories, there are three new recruits. One is Jane Lockland, a rather meek, quiet, young woman who has finally bailed on being her grandmother's unpaid servant. One is Luke Parrish, son of a billionaire, whose casual, self-indulgent lifestyle has finally angered his father sufficiently to bribe the Time Police to take him as a recruit. Another is Matthew Farrell, son of two of the historians at St. Mary's. In fact, his mother, Dr. Maxwell, is the one whom the Time Police find most infuriating. The three of them have survived the classroom portion of their training, and are now ready to be assigned to field training--"gruntwork." Most recruits have over the last weeks sorted themselves into natural teams of four--with three left over. These three. Who are not at all the ordinary sort of Time Police recruits. There's been a drive to increase diversity, in part due to a recognition at the top that with the Time Wars definitely over, they need to adopt a new approach to the new problematic time travelers--time tourists, speculators, big business, and organized crime. Jane fits the desire to have more women. Matthew is a nerd who wants to work on the Time Map after his gruntwork training, and is well suited to it. Luke--Luke is proof that enough money can buy almost anything. These three didn't even naturally attract each other. They're just the three left over, stuck together for lack of alternatives. Major Ellis takes them on as his team, and bribes an earlier St. Mary's refugee, Officer Celia North, who didn't like the chaotic atmosphere at St. Mary's and fled to the greater order of the Time Police, to be the missing fourth member of his new team. That team, Team 236 officially, Team Weird according to others, doesn't do anything the right way. Whether going after an amateur time traveler who jumps forward a week to find out the winning lottery numbers, or a single, pregnant rabbit genetically engineered to be immune to super myxomatosis and released into Australia, or as supporting members of a large team to stop a raid on King Tut's tomb three thousand years ago, they don't do anything the Time Police Way, And yet, they do it. They get their jobs done. Matthew even brings down three time traveling tomb raiders and prevents Major Ellis from dying of his gunshot wound during that operation to protect Tut's tomb. They are starting to gel as a team. Which is when they stumble into the crosshairs of a faction among the "traditional" Time Police officers, the ones who don't think people like Team Weird, or women generally, or people with any connection to St. Mary's, or with other nontraditional characteristics, should be recruited. Who don't think people like Commander Hay (head of the Time Police), or Major Ellis, should be running things. That's when things go all to heck, and Jane finds herself the only suspect in a murder, and Luke and Matthew dig her and themselves even deeper by pulling off a rescue, and the future of the Time Police, and possibly the future of history and the future, hang in the balance. It's a lot of fun, with good characters, action, people having to actually work with people they fundamentally disagree with. Oh, and a perfectly pulled off silly line delivered to the readers absolutely perfectly. Enjoy I bought this book. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las seriesThe Time Police (1)
"At some time in the future, the secret of time-travel became available to all. Chaos ensued as people sought to take advantage. Because there will always be nutters who want to change history... And so the Time Police were formed. Internationally sanctioned thugs whose task it was to keep the timeline straight by any and all means possible. And they succeeded. The Time Wars are over. The Time Police won. But who will win the peace? Doing Time follows three hapless new Time Police recruits - Jane, Luke and Matthew - as they try to navigate their first year on the beat. It's all going to be fine..."--Publisher description. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
Debates activosNingunoCubiertas populares
Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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