20 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
How dare they do this to my ROSS!, July 21, 2000
This review is from: Echoes in Time (Time Traders) (Mass Market Paperback)
I fell in love with Ross Murdoch many years ago as he snarled his way through TIME TRADERS. (I was fourteen; he was eighteen, or there about...a romance made in scifi heaven. Don't tell my husband!) I always greeted his reappearance in the sequels in Norton's Time Travel series with joyous daydreams. I thought he was rather sulky in KEY OUT OF TIME but I forgave him. FIREHAND, the book prior to ECHOES IN TIME, was a good read, if a bit poorly paced. Ross had finally grown up, matured and, in the end, married. It wasn't me, and I thought her rather cool but as I was a grandmother by this time, what could I do but bid Ross Godspeed and good luck. I was unaware that some evil power was planning to feature my hero in a BAD BOOK! ECHOES, unfortunately, takes all of FIREHAND'S weaknesses and magnifies them. The pacing is terrible; the plot can't decide whether it's about a marriage or a space adventure; and unlike, FIREHAND, I didn't like alot of the other characters. Which leaves me to wonder: how much of this was written by Norton and how much by Smith? Ms. Norton, if you're going to bequeath my Ross Murdoch to another author, please find one that can WRITE.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Far Better than Expected, August 30, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Echoes in Time (Time Traders) (Mass Market Paperback)
I had misgivings about reading this, as most of these dual author things are a disappointment. The previous one, FIREHAND, was terrible! This author was a far better match with Ms. Norton. The world was fascinating, and the characters finally took on some dimension. As for the writing, it was a relief to get away from the embarrassing cliches of FIREHAND. The pacing was slow, because there was so much explaining about past stories, but once that was over, and they got to the planet, it really picked up speed. I will buy any other books by these two authors.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Derelict in Time, January 7, 2003
For those who have read and enjoyed the early Time Trader books (The Time Traders, Galactic Derelict, The Defiant Agents, and Key Out of Time), this book will be an enjoyable extension, with just enough difference in emphasis to remind the reader that this is no longer Ms. Norton writing alone.
After some (somewhat slow) preliminaries that help re-establish this series into a somewhat more modern time frame of post-Cold War, the story picks up the loose ends left by Galactic Derelict, with a new expedition to the final destination of that book. Although their ostensible mission is to find the missing members of an earlier Russian exploration team, the book quickly turns to unraveling the mystery of how and why all the current time denizens of the planet appear to be devolved representatives of earlier highly civilized species.
The is the best aspect of this book, as in working out the mystery, there are some fascinating portrayals of multiple different species working within an overall society that may be the ultimate in enforced harmony. There is far more emphasis here on the real sciences of the cultural, anthropological, linguistic and biological variety than was present in the original books, and the basic plot provides for quite a bit of suspense and surprise, invigorating this tale with page-turning expectations. The mind-twisting consequences of time travel are reasonably worked out here, although without really answering the basic paradox inherent in time travel capabilities.
What isn't quite as good is the basic characterizations, usually one of Norton's stronger points. Ross Murdock and Gordon Ashe don't quite seem to be the people they were in the earlier books, and most of the Russian contingent seem very sketchily drawn. Murdock's relationship with his new wife Eveleen seems very artificial. However, Saba, a new character for this book, is very competently drawn, and she pretty much carries the book.
Stylistically, this book tends to more complex vocabulary and sentence structure than Ms. Norton normally uses, which I have to attribute to her collaborator. This added complexity seems to help add some muscle and a believable tone to the story.
A competent tale and a worthy new entry to the Time Trader series, a series that helped establish Norton as one of the premier writers in the SF field long before women writers became fashionable.
--- Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)
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