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In High Places (Crosstime Traffic) (Hardcover)

by Harry Turtledove (Author) "Wolves howled in the woods south of Paris..." (more)
Key Phrases: transposition chamber, home timeline, mottled clothes, Crosstime Traffic, Kingdom of Versailles, Duke Raoul (more...)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Alternative history maestro Turtledove deals a tad heavy-handedly with the issue of slavery in his third Crosstime Traffic novel (after 2004's Curious Notions). In one alternative time line, the Black Death continued far longer than it did in the "home" time line with the result that Muslims occupy much of Europe, which is made up of small, insular principalities and kingdoms. When bandits in this medieval world capture 18-year-old Annette Klein (aka Khadija the oil merchant's daughter), she's separated from her parents, with no way to return to the home time line from which she and her family originate. Worse, the bandits are slavers who send people into another alternate time line where they're forced to work in miserable conditions. Turtledove convincingly portrays the conflict between Christians and Muslims, but takes less care in depicting male-and-female relationships. Didactic pronouncements on slavery notwithstanding, the book should satisfy its target audience of younger readers. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Jacques, a young messenger in an alternate time line in which the Black Death has kept civilization at medieval or, at best, Renaissance levels of accomplishment, is sent to spy on some mysterious Muslim merchants. Unfortunately for him, they are Crosstimers; that is, employees of a company that dispatches traders to different time lines for the sake of financial gain. More unfortunately, their caravan is attacked by bandits. Jacques and Annette Klein end up slaves in Madrid and, soon after that, even farther away when the corrupt minions of a Crosstime slave-trading ring carry them off. By this time the two teenagers are friends and allies, and Jacques helps Annette escape and inform on their captors, while he plays a leading role in a slave rebellion. Although the last third is a bit jumbled, this is the best Crosstime Traffic yarn to date (the others: Gunpowder Empire, 2003; Curious Notions, 2004), featuring, besides two engaging protagonists, extensive exploration of the ethical issues of slavery. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books (December 27, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765306964
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765306968
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #823,668 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Power Trip, July 11, 2006
In High Places (2006) is the third novel in the Crosstime Traffic series, following Curious Notions. Annette Klein has spent the past year as Khadija, a muslim girl, in an alternate timeline. She is presently living with her parents in Paris within the Kingdom of Versailles, but will soon be returning to Marseilles and then to her home timeline. She is very happy to be returning to civilization.

In this novel, Jacques is a guardsman in the service of Duke Raoul. Jacques has met the Kleins in their identity of Muhammad al-Marsawi and family and was attracted by Annette, although the robe and veil hid all but her hands and eyes. He though she was about his own age, but he couldn't really be certain. Muhammad had aroused Duke Raoul's curiosity for various reasons, including his perfect Parisian accent; now Jacques is working as a caravan guard while spying on Annette's family.

South of Grenoble, brigands ambush the caravan, taking captives and looting the pack animals. Annette reacts to a lunging attack with a Judo throw and also to the next and the next, but then somebody hits her on the side of the head and she goes down. After another blow to the head, she loses consciousness. Jacques is shot in the leg as he runs back to the Kleins and then surrenders to the brigands.

When Annette regains consciousness, she finds that Jacques is still with her on their way to Madrid. But her parents had been taken to Marseilles. Arriving in Madrid, they are both sold to the same master and follow him to a compound within the city.

That evening they are taken down to a subcellar, placed against the wall, and see a silvery box suddenly appear in the center of the chamber. Annette immediately recognizes the box as a transposition chamber and knows that the slavers have access to crosstime technology. Soon she realizes that the technology must have been acquired within her own homeline; someone in Crosstime Traffic is running the whole show.

This novel portrays the ultimate nightmare of the Crosstime Secret: rogue employees using alternate timelines to act out their own frustrated perversions. The outlaws have taken slaves from various timelines and used them like animals. Even worse, some people have paid to be treated as such slaves, abused and beaten into submission. Of course, none of the paying customers are intentionally killed, but nothing keeps the guards from killing the real slaves.

This subject is addressed in Piper's Paratime series, but never covered to this extent. The characterization is much better developed herein, particularly among the technologically primitive slaves. Also, Annette and Jacques learn much about themselves and their cultures from such close contact with both the slavers and the slaves.

One of the things that Annette learns is the need for slaves (or the equivalent) in low technology cultures. All kinds of necessary work must be done by unwilling individuals if labor saving machines are not available. Insofar as the reviewer is aware, such work was performed involuntarily in all such low technology cultures, from the Norse thralls to the Chinese peasants. Such servitude -- from indentured servants to chattel slaves -- was common into the nineteenth century and, despite all efforts to eradicate it, still occurs elsewhere in the world.

Highly recommended for Turtledove fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of high adventure and alien cultures.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating Alternative, January 20, 2006
This is the third installment of Harry Turtledove's Crosstime Traffic series. These stories are based on a concept developed by the late and highly lamented science fiction writer H. Beam Piper: that numerous alternate worlds exist alongside our own, each different due to various "breakpoints" which occurred at various points in their histories. Thus Turtledove's first volume concerned a world in which the Roman Empire survived into the twenty-first century, his second was set in San Francisco in a world in which Germany won World War I, and now his third is the most ambitious yet.

The Kingdom of Versailles lies in what was once northern France, before the Black Death destroyed the vast majority of Europe's population in the 1300s (in our world the Plague killed off "only" one-third of the Europeans). In the aftermath of the Plague a new variety of Christianity emerged centered on the worship of Henri, God's Second Son. Now, nearly seven hundred years later, Versailles lies on the border between the Christian regions of Northern Europe and the expanding Muslim world to the south.

The story centers around young Jacques, a native-born citizen of Versailles, and Khadija, seemingly the daughter of a Muslim merchant,but actually Annette Klein from the "home time line" i.e. the "real world" of the late 21st century where time travel was discovered and Crosstime Traffic has become a stupendously wealthy corporation dealing in trade between the many alternate worlds.

Annette and her family have been spending some time in Versailles but are preparing to return to the home time line. Jacques is one of the guards of the caravan which is escorting the Kleins to the transposition chamber which takes them from world to world. Suddenly, the caravan is attacked by slavers, and Annette and Jacques are separated from her family. Ensuing events are exciting and well told, with some interesting plot twists and a satisfactory outcome.

All of Turtledove's stories in this series have teenage protagonists and are meant to be not only exciting but also morally instructive. Here the subtext of opposition to slavery is a bit obvious, but it nevertheless bears repetition. I hope there will be many more installments to come, and I only wish I could sign on to work at Crosstime Traffic myself!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars explores slavery and what it means to be a slave, January 2, 2006
By W Boudville (Terra, Sol 3) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
A few years ago, Turtledove discovered a curious omission in the science fiction market. Few major, living writers were targeting the juvenile market with new works, with the possible exception of Andre Norton. And in her case, arguably her best novels for young readers were written decades ago. While her recent productivity had fallen, due to age constraints. [She died in 2005.]

Turtledove is a smart bloke. So just as he made himself associated closely with the alternate history genre, he attempted to do likewise with juvenile science fiction. The latest result is this book, the third in his Crosstime Traffic series. Continuing the custom in the earlier books, he chooses a teenage protagonist. A different one from those earlier. This time, she is a 21st century Jewish girl, pretending to be a pious Muslim in an alternity where Europe was devastated by multiple Black Deaths, and Muslims conquered much of southern Europe. Plus, the Industrial Reformation never happened.

The result is a world stuck in the Middle Ages. Backward and squalid. Turtledove cleverly reveals piquant insights into this. As having a character refusing a drink of water. Because of the lack of sanitation, water is often sewage contaminated. Beer in fact is far safer.

While our timeline is shown as importing some food from this alternity, it is not a major factor in the plot. Unlike the second book. Perhaps Turtledove is implicitly acknowledging that our timeline's need for food could be easily met by farming unpopulated Earths. Or more prosaically, the agricultural productivity of this alternity is so low that a trade in food is not significant. I cannot tell from the text which reason it is, though I suspect it is one or both of these.

The plot lacks a certain tautness. Yes, it is an adventure novel. But you'd never confuse the level of action in it with, say, Stirling's Nantucket series.

The plot also has the heroine captured and sold into slavery. This lets Turtledove explore for the sake of the reader the iniquities of slavery, and the contrast between modern and past viewpoints. But probably because of the young audience, the details about the violence inherent in slavery are minimised. Nothing too graphic. In related wise, the rapes of female slaves by male slaveowners is mentioned in an en passant fashion. Nor does this happen to the heroine. No salacious descriptions. A thoroughly G-rated book.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars A Flawed morality to teach young folks
I loved Andre Norton's novels, and Robert Heinelein's, when I was in elementary school and perhaps I learned a kind of morality from them. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Peter J. Dalesandre

2.0 out of 5 stars Flat with no passion or real adventure
This third installment of Harry Turtledove's Crosstime Traffic series focuses on a young woman from a "modern" society that travels across dimensions into alternate Earths. Read more
Published on March 24, 2007 by K. O'Neil

3.0 out of 5 stars Good to see
I have, for some time, been interested in the Young Adult market, considering most the stuff I've found has been some kind of Catcher-in-The-Rye wannabe, about disfunctional... Read more
Published on April 30, 2006 by Richard Aubrey

4.0 out of 5 stars Strongest installment yet in Crosstime Series
Disguised as Moslem traders from Marsailles, Khadija and her parents are actually crosstime traders--buying the stuff that lets the home timeline prosper. Read more
Published on April 4, 2006 by booksforabuck

4.0 out of 5 stars Good read with an excellent plot
In High Places: A Novel of Crosstime Traffic, by Harry Turtledove, is an exciting science-fiction adventure. Read more
Published on February 25, 2006 by Gary H. Cassel

5.0 out of 5 stars Just adding my 2 cents worth...
Harry Turtledove has been rewriting history for a most amazing 25 years, blending historical fact and fiction in ways that are sure to entertain, plus raise a few eyebrows along... Read more
Published on February 5, 2006 by Edward Alexander Gerster

5.0 out of 5 stars terrific exhilarating futuristic thriller
In the Kingdom of Versailles in the year 715 of the New Revolution winter keeps its grip on everyone while aristocrat, freeman, serf, and slave expect the Berber Kingdom of Berry... Read more
Published on January 11, 2006 by Harriet Klausner

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