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Short story – A circular paradox in which a man discovers that he is his own mother and father. 1959–1989 The Time Machine series "Donald Keith" alias of Donald & Keith Monroe: Series of 23 short stories published in Boys' Life magazine centered around a patrol of Boy Scouts who acquire an abandoned time machine. 1961 Danny Dunn, Time Traveler
Take Us to Your Chief: and Other Stories; Tales in Time; Thiotimoline; The Time Traveler's Almanac; Time's Arrow (short story) Timegates; Timescapes: Stories of Time Travel; The Toynbee Convector; Twelve Thousand Head of Cattle; Twilight Zone: 19 Original Stories on the 50th Anniversary
The Time Traveler's Almanac (British title: The Time Traveller's Almanac [1]) is a 2013 anthology edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer. It contains stories that focus on time travel . It was released in November 2013 in the UK and on March 18, 2014, in the US.
A must-read for any fans of time travel fiction, The Time Traveler's Almanac is "the largest and most definitive collection of time travel stories ever assembled." In it, editors Ann and Jeff ...
In this story I felt a vast weariness over the space program, which had thrilled us so at the start—especially the first lunar landing—and then had been forgotten and virtually shutdown, a relic of history. I wondered, if time-travel became a "program" would it suffer the same fate?
The first American edition was issued in hardcover under the alternate title Time Travelers: Fiction in the Fourth Dimension by Barnes & Noble Books in 1998. [ 1 ] The book collects twenty four novelettes and short stories by various science fiction authors, with an introduction by the editor.
"Time's Arrow" is a science fiction short story by British writer Arthur C. Clarke, first published in 1950 in the first issue of the magazine Science Fantasy. The story revolves about the unintended consequences of using time travel to study dinosaurs. The story was included in the 2005 anthology The Best Time Travel Stories of the 20th Century.
[8] To Tom Easton, it "is a classic exposition of the time-travel paradox," and de Camp "always one of my favorite SF&F writers." [ 9 ] Harry Turtledove called the story "a fine specimen of the for-want-of-a-nail story: a small change in the past producing enormous ramifications as the centuries roll by," with "things [not] so easy as the ...