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62 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The time-travel pioneer's classic shorts
Jack Finney, writing in the late 1950s and early 1960s, was hardly the first writer who explored time travel; after all, H.G. Wells wrote "The Time Machine" more than half a century earlier, and that classic was already being turned into a movie as Finney was writing his short stories. But Finney defined the time-travel story as no other writer has. When you...
Published on December 21, 2001 by Brian Melendez

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fun read but a little disappointing
After reading "Time and Again", From Time to Time", and "Forgotten News" I was little disappointed with this book. What I love about Jack Finney is his rich and detailed descriptions of the past. The reader, in a sense, becomes the time traveler. These stories are more of a play on the time travel theme with little of the vivid detail and...
Published on December 9, 1999 by David Savage


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62 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The time-travel pioneer's classic shorts, December 21, 2001
By 
Brian Melendez (Minneapolis, MN United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
Jack Finney, writing in the late 1950s and early 1960s, was hardly the first writer who explored time travel; after all, H.G. Wells wrote "The Time Machine" more than half a century earlier, and that classic was already being turned into a movie as Finney was writing his short stories. But Finney defined the time-travel story as no other writer has. When you read these stories, they will seem familiar to you--perhaps because you have read them before, as many of them have appeared in other anthologies; but perhaps because so many other writers have imitated Finney, all without surpassing him.

Here you will find "The Third Level," about a mysterious platform in Grand Central Station that leads into another world (a precursor of "Level Nine and Three-quarters" in the "Harry Potter" books). And "Of Missing Persons," the classic tale of lost faith and missed opportunities. And "The Coin Collector," about alternate realities, where "a Woodrow Wilson dime" reveals that "every once in a while something from one of these worlds . . . will stray into another one."

Jack Finney wasn't the first, but he was the best. His stories weave together O. Henry's story-telling talent (and surprise-twist endings), Rod Serling's imagination, and Ray Bradbury's skill at juxtaposing the familiar with the slightly terrifying. This book's stories are a treat.

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fun read but a little disappointing, December 9, 1999
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
After reading "Time and Again", From Time to Time", and "Forgotten News" I was little disappointed with this book. What I love about Jack Finney is his rich and detailed descriptions of the past. The reader, in a sense, becomes the time traveler. These stories are more of a play on the time travel theme with little of the vivid detail and character that I found in the other books.

That said, "About Time" is definitely a fun read. The stories reminded me of Twilight Zone episodes. "The Face in the Photo" in particular was my favorite where a detective finds his most "at-large" criminals in pictures and newsreels from the past.

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A collection of clever stories, August 23, 2003
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This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
The twelve stories in this collection by the author of Invasion of the Body Snatchers were originally published in 1957 and 1962. The stories are similar to Finney's classic novel Time and Again--in which the book's protagonist travels back to late 19th-century New York--both because nearly all of them have to do with time travel ("Lunch-Hour Magic" and "Home Alone" are exceptions) and because many of the characters express their dissatisfaction with the modern world and wish to escape from it. Usually this flight from modernity is to be achieved by time travel, but it can also take the form of interplanetary migration ("Of Missing Persons") or balloon flight ("Home Alone").

Time travel in these stories is achieved almost effortlessly, when the "thousand invisible chains" that keep us in the present--modern coins and manufactured items, apartment buildings--are, for a moment, loosed. If there's nothing on you that wouldn't belong in the world fifty or sixty or seventy years ago, and if you're in a place that hasn't been altered much in all that time, and if you're in the right frame of mind, you can slip into the past, easy as can be. Just so, the car-obsessed college student of Finney's "Second Chance," while driving along an old highway in his restored Jordan Playboy, finds himself sharing the road with Model T's. His brief presence in the past has the effect of altering history in a way that will influence his own future.

Al and his wife Nell of Finney's "Such Intersting Neighbors" find the Hellenbeks, who have just moved into their California neighborhood, strange but pleasant. Ted Hellenbek is an inventor, an intelligent guy who was born and raised in the U.S., and yet he fumbles with his money, unable to count it out himself, when he has to pay the driver of his cab upon his arrival in town. Alfred Pullen buys a paper with a 1958 Wilson dime in "The Coin Collector" and finds himself at once in an alternative universe where such coins exist--and where he has married a different woman. In "Where the Cluetts Are" an architect helps a couple build a house following blueprints that belonged to his grandfather. The house, with its peaked roof and many gables, is an anachronism, and it has a curious effect on its inhabitants. In "Lunch-Hour Magic" an advertising agency employee buys a pair of glasses that allow him to see through women's clothes:

"I kept the glasses on nearly all afternoon, wandering around the office with a sheaf of papers in my hand, and strangely it was Mrs. Humphrey, our middle-aged overweight bookkeeper, that I stared at longest. Last year, I knew, she'd celebrated the twenty-fifth anniversary of her marriage to her husband, Harvey. But there, unmistakably, tattooed on her left hip, was a four-inch high red heart inside which, in a slanted blue script, was inscribed Ralph, and I wondered if she'd had the fearsome job of hiding it from Harvey for a quarter of a century."

Finney writes well--that "fearsome job" is quite good--and his stories are clever. If they are not quite as well done as his novels, this collection nevertheless makes a pleasant and easy read.

Reviewed by Debra Hamel, author of Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan's Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you loved "Time and Again", you will love these stories, August 5, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
I have read this book twice - so far. Some truly charming stories that, as was the case in the novel "Time and Again", encourage one to see the past with new eyes. I can honestly say that my perception of the past (and, consequently, the present) has been enriched by these stories. I especially loved the stories of the house that received a second chance, and of the car vintage car that gives its riders a second chance. I have recommended this book to many of my friends.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 12 short stories from a master storyteller, March 13, 2003
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This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
Jack Finney is a remarkably talented writer. He manages to balance whimsy and passion in a narrative voice that is authentically Everyman, and his descriptions are vivid and lush, whether he's depicting a character's apartment or a milieu in the past. You won't find many more talented writers in any genre, and the fact that he's writing time paradoxes only increases your pleasure.

These 12 stories are a lot of fun. While I think Finney, writing circa 1950s, excelled in the novel(la) format because he could fully indulge his gift for description, these shorts are enjoyable because they make great reads when you have less time -- in more ways than one.

These stories were originally collected in two anthologies: The Third Level (1957/1976) and I Love Galesburg in the Springtime (1962), though those collections may be difficult to find. All are great, but my favorites are: "Such Interesting Neighbors", about the rather strange Hellenbek family who lives next door; "Lunch-Hour Magic", about the lengths one will go to find love (or lust); "The Face in the Photo", about a novel escape for criminals; and "Of Missing Persons", about getting a second chance at Paradise. "The Third Level" is a classic that you may well have read in other anthologies, and "The Coin Collector" was later expanded into novella-length "The Woodrow Wilson Dime" -- a treatment most of these wonderful stories could sustain. The latter features a wonderful passage about books written by authors, including Mark Twain, who lived longer in the alternate reality in which the narrator finds himself. Each story ends with a twist that would roll off Rod Serling's tongue.

If you enjoy time travel stories (though not hard sf), great storytelling or endings with a wink, this is a collection you must have. Finney is a marvel! Give yourself a treat!

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quiet, nice stories . . . and that's okay sometimes, June 9, 2003
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
Finney is sort of the Clifford Simak of time travel, as best expressed in his classic novel, _Time and Again_. The shorter pieces in this volume originally appeared in _The Third Level_ and _I Love Galesburg in the Springtime,_ and have been reprinted many times elsewhere, as well, but they're still perfect reading for that warm summer Sunday afternoon in the hammock. The "furniture" in these stories -- the social commentary, the cultural backdrop of the 1950s -- may seem rather dated, but all of them share a wistfulness that transcends the period in which they were written. In "The Coin Collector" (also published as "The Woodrow Wilson Dime"), a man finds an odd bit of coinage in his pocket change, an artifact of a closely parallel world, in which he married a different girl and took a different job, and in which Mark Twain wrote another Huck Finn novel. He finds it all very exciting -- for a while. "Of Missing Persons" is about the opportunity to *really* get away from it all, and how to blow your only chance. "The Third Level" is about being able to catch a train back into a quieter, happier past. One definitely gets the impression that Finney would rather have been anywhere else than the mid-20th century -- a feeling most of us probably share from time to time, but we forget that the "Good Old Days" never really happened. So these stories might be considered naive -- but still, they're very pleasant reading.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TIME TRAVEL BY A MASTER, June 26, 2006
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This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
Jack Finney is one of the great writers of time travel stories. His stories were used often on "Twilight Zone" (the original)series. His style of writing is very easy to read but has so much depth and life to them. One story in the book is about some unusual citizens who have "modern" inventions that baffle their new neighbors. A lot of the stories have characters that hunger for more "nostalgic" times and remain wistful in nature. I highly recommend this book.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Master of Time Travel Stories, January 4, 2003
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
When I was very young, I read in a high school textbook the story "The Third Level," about a man who discovers a floor of Grand Central Station that leads to the 1800's. He comes home to get his family and buy money from the era, but he soon finds he can't find the level again although he spends his free time trying. It has been my favorite story since, and it is supported here by eleven other tales of equal quality. Finney handles the subject of time travel with tenderness and whimsy, and pulls it off every time. "The Woodrow Wilson Dime" (later expanded into a novel) is another favorite, about a man who finds a strange dime when he buys a newspaper and comes home to find a different wife, who he falls in love with. When he tires of his lifestyle, he finds a Roosevelt dime and goes back to his other wife. The story proposes the question of whether or not you are cheating on your spouse if your spouse doesn't exist in that reality. The story about the strange new neighbor who posseses a newspaper from the future is a tongue-in-cheek classic, and the one about the antique car is not to be missed. If you liked his novels "Time and Again" and "From Time to Time," you'll love this one. Also recommended are "The Mirror" by Marlys Millhiser and "Lightning" by Dean Koontz.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The One True Master, May 31, 2007
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
Jack Finney is simply amazing. His short stories are poignant, prophetic, intelligent, and scary. He accomplishes all this in sometimes only a handful of pages. "I'm Scared" is still to this day more unnerving than most horror films. I still get goose-bumps reading it and pondering the reality of that small story.

Every story is great, yet each seems better than the last. The simple fact is that the more often you re-read them the more depth they tend to have.

I find his stories to be some of the most important sci-fi I have ever read. He is indispensable to any fan of the genre. he is also a must read for anyone who longs for the past.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Master of Time Travel Stories, January 4, 2003
This review is from: About Time: 12 Short Stories (Paperback)
When I was very young, I read in a high school textbook the story "The Third Level," about a man who discovers a floor of Grand Central Station that leads to the 1800's. He comes home to get his family and buy money from the era, but he soon finds he can't find the level again although he spends his free time trying. It has been my favorite story since, and it is supported here by eleven other tales of equal quality. Finney handles the subject of time travel with tenderness and whimsy, and pulls it off every time. "The Woodrow Wilson Dime" (later expanded into a novel) is another favorite, about a man who finds a strange dime when he buys a newspaper and comes home to find a different wife, who he falls in love with. When he tires of his lifestyle, he finds a Roosevelt dime and goes back to his other wife. The story proposes the question of whether or not you are cheating on your spouse if your spouse doesn't exist in that reality. The story about the strange new neighbor who posseses a newspaper from the future is a tongue-in-cheek classic, and the one about the antique car is not to be missed. If you liked his novels "Time and Again" and "From Time to Time," you'll love this one. Also recommended are "The Mirror" by Marylis Millhiser and "Lightning" by Dean Koontz.
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About Time: 12 Short Stories
About Time: 12 Short Stories by Jack Finney (Paperback - February 19, 1998)
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