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The Disunited States of America (Crosstime Traffic) [Hardcover]

Harry Turtledove (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Crosstime Traffic September 5, 2006
Time travel doesn't work. You can't go backward or forward; you're stuck at "now". What you can do is travel sideways, to the same "now" in another timeline where history turned out differently.

So far, only our home timeline has figured out how to do that. We use Crosstime Traffic to conduct discreet trading operations in less advanced timelines, selling goods just a little bit better than the locals can make. It's profitable, but families who work as Time Traders have to be careful to fit in, lest the locals become suspicious.

Justin's family are Time Traders. The summer before he's due to start college, he goes with them to a different Virginia, in a timeline where the American states never became a single country, and American history has consisted of a series of small wars. Despite his unease, he accompanies Randolph Brooks, another Time Trader, on a visit to the tiny upland town of Elizabeth, Virginia. He'll only be away from his parents for a few days.

Beckie Royer thanks her stars that she's from California, the most prosperous and advanced country in North America. But just now she's in Virginia with her grandmother, who wants to revisit the tiny mountain town where she grew up. The only interesting thing there is a boy named Justin--and he'll be gone soon.

Then war between Virginia and Ohio breaks out anew. Ohio sets a tailored virus loose on Virginia. Virginia swiftly imposes a quarantine, trapping Becky and Justin and Randolph Brooks in Elizabeth. Even Crosstime Traffic can't help. All the three of them can do is watch as plague and violence take over the town.

It's nothing new in history, not in this timeline or any other. It's part of the human condition. And just now, this part of the human condition sucks.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In Turtledove's fast-paced fourth Crosstime Traffic novel (after 2005's In High Places), two teenage protagonists from different versions of the United States meet in Elizabeth, Va., a backwater town in a balkanized North America. Beckie Royer, an inadvertent gunrunner from Los Angeles, accompanies her grandmother and uncle in a car loaded with assault rifles meant for African-American rebels in Virginia. The state, known as a country in this alternate history, is on the brink of a race-related civil war—and a war with Ohio. Into the chaos comes Justin Monroe, a Crosstime Traffic traveler on a trade mission with his mother. Becky and Justin solidify their friendship as the mayhem escalates to biological warfare, and they and their families face ethical and space-time dilemmas. Via sympathetic characters, Turtledove delivers lessons on racism and diplomacy for a young adult audience. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

The fourth Crosstime Traffic story unfolds in a time line in which the former colonies couldn't agree on a government to replace that of the Articles of Confederation and eventually became independent, squabbling states. Becky from California, the most prosperous country in North America, is visiting family in little Elisabeth, Virginia. Justin's family is in crosstime trade, on assignment from its home time line to Virginia. While the family is there, war breaks out with Ohio, which deploys a tailored virus and encourages guerrilla warfare by Virginia's subjugated black population. Virginia imposes quarantine, trapping Justin and Becky in Elisabeth. Until an effective treatment is developed, not even Crosstime Traffic can help, for it doesn't want the virus spreading to other time lines. Justin and Becky had read about historic wars, but neither ever expected a front-row seat at one. Both stand a good chance of never making it home again. The best so far in this Turtledove series, with characters that you care about and action that, while grim, is plausible and engaging. Frieda Murray
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; First Edition edition (September 5, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765314851
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765314857
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (19 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,482,987 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Harry Turtledove is the award-winning author of the alternate-history works The Man with the Iron Heart; The Guns of the South; How Few Remain (winner of the Sidewise Award for Best Novel); the Worldwar saga: In the Balance, Tilting the Balance, Upsetting the Balance, and Striking the Balance; the Colonization books: Second Contact, Down to Earth, and Aftershocks; the Great War epics: American Front, Walk in Hell, and Breakthroughs; the American Empire novels: Blood & Iron, The Center Cannot Hold, and Victorious Opposition; and the Settling Accounts series: Return Engagement, Drive to the East, The Grapple, and In at the Death. Turtledove is married to fellow novelist Laura Frankos. They have three daughters: Alison, Rachel, and Rebecca.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating historical creation... pedestrian writing, November 6, 2006
This review is from: The Disunited States of America (Crosstime Traffic) (Hardcover)
In a way, the Crosstime Traffic books are some of Turtledove's finest creations.

Not only are the histories he creates truly unique, but I've always felt that Turtledove is a much stronger writer when he limits the scope of the story to a minimum of characters. I can read his Guns of the South or In The Presence of Mine Enemies repeatedly while his sprawling epics tend to feel muddled. In these books, we have a loosely connected series of self-contained novels that focus on two or three characters at most with enough time to easily explain the difference in histories with a minimum of fuss. I've enjoyed the series so far despite being a decade or so older than the target audience.

Unfortunately, I found this installment to be a direly weak book that leaves me reluctant to see what he does next.

In the first place, this book does not explore the inner workings of the true locals. We don't see the inner workings of a character who was born and bred in an independent, Virginia with institutional racism. Instead, we are given two characters that are essentially tourists, who are quick to judge what's going on around them without considering the society as a whole. I'm not saying that there's much to admire in the Virginian society, but I felt like I was being bludgeoned by a steady stream of conversations and monologues decrying the way things were, something that I didn't feel needed to be spelled out so blatantly.

Second, I was bothered by the lack of use of obscene language, especially in the middle of a war zone. Admittedly, this is a book for young adults and I wouldn't want to see it peppered throughout with foul language just for the sake of verisimilitude, but Turtledove is too coy with it here. It would be one thing if the course language of the soldiers wasn't addressed, like a John Wayne WWII film where the characters were reduced to "darn", "shucks" and "heck". It's another thing to be told in a roundabout fashion what words were really at play, like the pet owner who spells out "V-E-T" around Fido.

From the book: "'We can sort out all this stuff' -- he used a word something like stuff, anyway..."

It's sloppy writing and it was a distraction every time I came across a passage that came explicitly sanitized for my protection.

I was left with a really interesting scenario being played out be reasonably interesting characters (must every book in the series involve some sort of crosstime infatuation?) in a fascinating history marred by exceptionally pedestrian writing that jarred the plot like a mistimed watch.

I'm hesitant to read the next one, but I'll probably give it a whirl anyway.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More Great Alternatives From Turtledove, September 12, 2006
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This review is from: The Disunited States of America (Crosstime Traffic) (Hardcover)
Here is the fourth of Harry Turtledove's exciting Crosstime Traffic series. Its alternative history with a twist: Crosstime Traffic is a giant corporation in the late 21st century US which controls the secret of traveling to parallel worlds through transposition chambers. The science is a bit woolly and largely goes unexplained by Turtledove, but it doesn't really matter.

Each of the Crosstime Traffic books thus far has had teenage protagonists who deal with difficult ethical situations in different timelines. The Disunited States of America is set in a world where the US Constitution was never written and the Articles of Confederation failed to work, meaning that North America is split into dozens of sometimes warring nations.

Justin and his mother are Crosstime Traffic workers who do business in the independent nation of Virginia. Unfortunately, while they are at work Ohio goes to war against Virginia and unleashes a manmade plague that sickens and kills nearly everyone exposed. The other major character is Becky, a native of California who is caught by the war on a visit to Virginia with her crotchety grandmother. The two teenagers become friends (but no more) during the weeks they spend dealing with war and illness.

All of the Crosstime Traffic series are well written with plots aimed at high school and younger readers. The stories are imaginative and thought provoking and (I hope) will inspire an interest in history within their target audience. I've enjoyed all four Crosstime Traffic books thus far and hope Turtledove will continue the series indefinitely. I only wish that I could get a job at Crosstime Traffic myself!
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Technically High Civilization, But . . ., November 19, 2006
By 
This review is from: The Disunited States of America (Crosstime Traffic) (Hardcover)
The Disunited States (2006) is the fourth Alternate History novel in the Crosstime Traffic series, following In High Places. In the previous volume, Annette Klein manages to escape from slavery and returns to her home timeline. Crosstime Traffic undergoes a harsh public scrutiny.

In this novel, Beckie Royer and her grandmother are visiting relatives in Ohio and they are en route to Virginia to visit still more. Beckie is getting tired of the differences between her native country of California and these eastern states. Her anxiety level has just shot up as she realizes that the odd-shaped things in the floorboards are assault rifles.

Just then her Uncle Luke drives the car up to the Virginia border station and states that he has nothing to declare. The Virginia border guards take their passports and are surprised when Beckie and her grandmother hand over California papers. After a short discussion of their visits to family members in both states, the guards wave them through the station.

The next stop is Elizabeth, Virginia, population 1316. Uncle Luke drops them off in front of the courthouse and pulls out headed for Charleston, Virginia. Beckie is not sorry to see the white Honda leave, particularly since the rifles are going with it. Beckie briefly mentions the rifles to her grandmother, but nothing gets through Gran's fixation on the inconveniences of life.

Justin Monroe and his mother are coming to this timeline for a standard tour of duty. Randolph Brooks is their local contact. The natives believe that Justin's mother is Randolph's sister.

When they arrive at the Charleston Coin and Stamp Company, Justin notices a white Honda parking in front of the donut house and the driver carries a blanket wrapped bundle into the shop. When he comes out, two passing policemen cause him to almost jump out of his skin. As the police walk by, the man jumps onto his car and drives away.

Later, Randolph takes Justin with him to visit a client in Elizabeth. There Justin meets Beckie, who is staying with the Snodgrasses. Ethel Snodgrass is Gran's cousin and Ted Snodgrass is Randolph's client. As Ted and Randolph settle in for some old-fashioned haggling, Justin and Beckie take a couple of fizzes out back and talk.

As the haggling goes on, a TV announcer reports that a strange illness has broken out in several locations in the state and all travel has been suspended until further notice. Justin and Randolph are now stranded in Elizabeth. Even worse, Beckie cannot return to California until the disease is identified and a treatment discovered. Then starts the shooting war between Ohio and Virginia.

This story is about a United States that could not agree on a constitution; apparently a bicameral legislature was never considered. The Articles of Confederation were ignored more and more until they became part of the past. The various states began to separate until each was an autonomous nation; they even had wars among themselves.

Some of the states merged with each other -- for example, the Carolinas -- but mostly they went their own ways. Of course, neighboring states traded with each other, but disjointed transportation and communications systems didn't make long distance trading very profitable. Some states -- such as California and Texas -- were Great Nations, worldwide leaders in science and technology; California had even sent men to Mars. But there were not any Super Powers.

One consequence of these disunited states was the continuance of racial tensions and black uprisings in the South. The twenty year cycle of racial wars continued on into the late twenty-first century, with no end in sight. Neither the whites or blacks considered tolerance as an option; the hatreds were just too widespread.

In the state of Mississippi, the usual status was reversed; blacks dominated whites. This inversion was enough to keep white intolerance at a fever pitch throughout the South. Anyone -- white or black -- who tried to express other views was shouted down by his neighbors and lucky to survive the incident.

Highly recommended for Turtledove fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of exotic cultures out of our own past and the inhumanity of war.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
home timeline, transposition chamber, crosstime secret, crosstime travel, immunity shots, stamp dealer, alternate where, stamp shop
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Crosstime Traffic, Uncle Luke, Los Angeles, Jephany Knob, African Americans, Randolph Brooks, North America, Sheriff Cochrane, Ted Snodgrass, Justin Monroe, Senior Agent Jefferson, Agent Madison, Agent Tyler, Ethel Snodgrass, Beckie Royer, Daisy Springer, George Herman, Rebecca Royer, Twonk's Disease, Chester Cochrane, Miss Royer, West Virginia, Wirt County, Charles Clark, Charlie Clark
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