![]() Most readers, especially sci-fi enthusiasts, will look forward to the other books in this series: Time Riders: Day of the Predators, Time Riders: The Doomsday Code, and Time Riders: The Eternal War. Subheadings that give the time and place help the reader track the story threads, and intense moments sprinkled with philosophy and a bit of humor make this a very enjoyable and readable book. In spite of all the high-tech talk about why things work and why they should be monitored, the story seems grounded in reality, and a complicated idea comes across clearly. This book takes that one step further by creating an agency of time riders to make sure that does not happen. Many sci-fi time-traveling books deal with the idea that messing with time is a bad idea that usually makes things worse than they are. ![]() ![]() On the other hand, some characters, like Kramer and his neo-Nazis, seem like comic book heroes, and there is more violence than necessary. ![]() This book's idea is creative, the writing engaging, the adventures fast-paced, and the main characters seem like people you might like to know. ![]()
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