Time and Again by Jack Finney Epub Download
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Five stars:
I Love Galesburg in the Springtime. Reporter Oscar Mannheim of the Register-Mail, a local boy who refused any opportunities that would've taken him away from his hometown of Galesburg, Illinois, investigates the account of a business investor who claims he was nearly run down by a streetcar, the likes of which hasn't existed in town in twenty years. His story may be connected to a blaze extinguished by a phantom fire brigade and a farmer whose out-of-service wall phone rings one night.
Home Alone (original title The Intrepid Aeronaut). Charley Burke's observation of a hawk floating in the winds high above his home in Marin County inspires him to build a balloon, a project he keeps a secret. On his maiden moonlit flight over the San Francisco Bay Area, Charley's activities are revealed to a neighbor, Edna Landias, while she walks her dog. Mrs. Landias seeks Charley out and begs him to take with her him on his next flight.
Second Chance. A college senior in Hylesburg, Illinois realizes his dream to restore a 1923 Jordan Playboy, purchased for seventy-five dollars from a farmer who reveals that the car was damaged a year after it rolled off the lot when the daredevil teenager behind the wheel decided to race a train and lost, killing himself and his girlfriend. His restoration complete, the classic car lover finds himself racing into 1923 on the night of the Playboy's fateful race.
Hey, Look at Me!. Book critic Peter Marks of Mill Valley, California develops a friendship with a solitary, destitute writer named Maxwell Kingery, who feels he's destined to be celebrated as a great author and man. Kingery's ambition is overshadowed by a chronic case of bad luck and even after his dreams die, his spirit lives on, much to the horror of Marks and his wife Cora.
Four stars:
Such Interesting Neighbors. San Rafael resident Al Lewis recounts his strange neighbors, Ted & Ann Hellenbek, who arrived in town with new clothes and furniture. Ann has a habit of walking into closed doors. Ted fancies himself as an inventor, as well as an amateur science fiction writer, and shares with Al a fantastic tale he made up about a future where time travel is the most popular tourist attraction, so popular, that the population begins plummeting when people relocate to the past.
Where the Cluetts Are. An architect is offered the job of building a dream house in Darley, Connecticut for a shipbuilder named Sam Cluett. Reviewing designs with the two men, the client's wife Ellie stumbles upon an architectural rendering drawn but never constructed in the 1880s. Money being no object, the Cluetts pick the vintage design, purchasing land and using all the original building materials. Once complete, the magnificent house has a curious effect on the couple.
I'm Scared. A widower in New York City tunes in to a radio broadcast from twenty years in the past. His anecdote introduces him to others who have their own strange experiences to relate: a strip of gray paint that appears on a house one year before the owner begins repainting, a couple whose marriage is dissolving after a family photo when developed reveals a strange woman standing in her place, a detective trying to identify a man struck dead in Times Square wearing 19th century garb and carrying ancient pocket change. The widower's deduction about what these stories foretell is not good.
These savory tales constitute a wonderful appetizer to Time and Again, the full-course time travel novel Jack Finney published in 1970 and the best book of its kind I've read. Several of the stories feature elements that would stick in Finney's head long enough to appea in his novel: New York City, the 1880s, architecture, sketching, Einstein theory. Finney, who graduated college in Galesburg, IL in 1934, worked in New York at an advertising agency and settled in Northern California in the early '50s, infuses his work with the atmosphere and mood swings of each of those three locations.
My favorite story of the bunch, Second Chance, uses a vintage car as a time travel device, returning the young driver thirty years in the past, where he risks tampering with his family tree. I find it improbable that Bob Gale & Robert Zemeckis were unaware of the story before they wrote Back to the Future.
Each of the stories was written more or less during the time The Twilight Zone was on the air. While Jack Finney never wrote for the television series, his work fits far too easily into the dark fantasy of the program, making it tempting to think Rod Serling was aware of Finney's outstanding work as well.
...moreJack Finney had a fantastic imagination. What can I say!! This is a huge favorite of mine. It's my go to when I can't settle on anything and when I need to escape the world. There are maybe two stories I'm not keen on but I love the rest and my absolute favorite is Where The Cluetts Are. I have a fascination with stories that have houses at their centre and this IS all about the house.
Jack Finney had a fantastic imagination. ...more
4 stars out of 5. Excellent low-key afternoon reading.
...moreWhen I was reading the third story in this book, Such Interesting Neighbors, I realized it was the plot described above. A little internet research revealed Time is Just a Place was based on Jack Finney's short story and that the original show I saw was available for viewing on You Tube. I watched it. The low budget, 1950s style special effects seem cheesy now but they sure made an impression on me then. Reading Such Interesting Neighbors now presents no such problem – it is a terrific short story, as are all the stories in this volume.
I enjoyed this book immensley.
...moreFinney's oeuvre is a wistful nostalgia, escapism that transports the reader to a world and time better than the present (late 50s and early 60s) because it is simpler and slower, and consequently more humane. Finney's writing is well adapted to serve very clever plots and conceits, and exceeds being merely utilitarian because he is able to modulate his voice in mostly first-person narratives (11 of the 12), though there is a certain sameness in that all have a calm, matter-of-fact reasonableness to them, neither too much nor little being said while employing a streamlined discursive tone that sometimes rhapsodizes (though in never a purple manner) about, typically, aspects of the past. In addition to the wistfulness, there is often a gentle playfulness in his narrator's manner, which further ingratiates the narrator. In short, it's as if a Finney narrator is someone had sat down with you at a bistro or lounge and with whom you were enjoying the moment when suddenly and almost confidentially he commences to tell you about something that was on his mind, just because he'd been mulling it over pleasantly for a while and thought it interesting.
Quick synopses (in order of preference)
The Third Level: narrator discovers a third train level at Grand Central which takes one back to 1890s, but cannot find it again. Amongst his first-day covers, he discovers a letter from 1894 which was written by the only man to whom he'd told of the third level
Second Chance: the narrator rebuilds an old car that was wrecked in fatal collision, re-enters that car's era and loses the car to its previous owner, then falls in love with a girl whose father drove the same model car
Such Interesting Neighbors: a narrator recounts his former neighbors whose husband made small inventions and showed him a mock-up of an illustrated story about people leaving a dying future in order to settle in the past
Of Missing Persons: the narrator recounts forlornly how he'd had the chance to go to the world of his dreams, but he'd doubted at the last second its reality
Home Alone: in the single third-person story in this collection, the protagonist is alone for several days while his wife and kids are away, and he builds and flies a hot-air balloon twice, once with a neighbor woman
The Face in the Photo: a physicist sending people to the past must deal with a nosey detective who has seen old photos that reveal the physicist's activities
I'm Scared: the narrator's thesis, based on a list of strange events (including a 30-year-old radio broadcast, a full-grown dog that appears before its owner has even bought the puppy, a family photo that appears to show the family two or three years in the future) is that nostalgia (a longing for the past) is disrupting time itself
The Coin Collector: by means of coins that themselves have slipped between two alternate time streams, the narrator alternates every three or four months between different-tempered wives
Lunch Hour Magic: the narrator tells how he uses his lunchtime to find interesting things, in this case some one-off items at a two-bit magic shop that bring him and a co-worker closer together
I Love Galesburg in the Springtime: a series of accidents that seem to involve specters from the past suggest to the narrator that the town is fighting back against any attempts to modernize the little town of Galesburg, IL
Where the Cluetts Are: the architect narrator recounts how his wealthy friends had him use his grandfather's 1880s plans to build a "new" home, which ends in altering their lives
Hey, Look at Me: the narrator tells about an ambitious writer who dies before his opus is complete and whose ghost is re-appearing in order to complete the task that was going to make his name
History tells me that Finney's novel Time and Again is on the nearby horizon, but now aware of just how seductive Finney's version of the past can be, I'm better prepared to resist a third reading of Time and Again (in order to deal with a stack of waiting books)... for now.
...moreJack Finney wrote a much-beloved time travel classic, Time and Again. These are short stories that also play with both time and place. All of them are about 20-25 pages, and perfect to dip into between books or when you just have a little reading time.
As with most collections, I appreciated some more than others. One was way off base for me, but overall they were solid and enjoyable.
Finney was born in the Midwest, and that's where he went
Originally published on my book blog, TheBibliophage.com.Jack Finney wrote a much-beloved time travel classic, Time and Again. These are short stories that also play with both time and place. All of them are about 20-25 pages, and perfect to dip into between books or when you just have a little reading time.
As with most collections, I appreciated some more than others. One was way off base for me, but overall they were solid and enjoyable.
Finney was born in the Midwest, and that's where he went to college. Then he moved to New York City and worked in advertising. Later, he lived in the San Francisco Bay Area. All of these locales make appearances in his stories, and all feel nostalgic.
About the stories
One deeply chauvinistic story, Lunch-Hour Magic, is about glasses that give a young New York City man x-ray vision of only the women around him. I could hardly get through this one, written in 1962. It was full of a Mad Men vibe, including plenty of female objectification. I thought seriously about putting this book down.
But I didn't, and I'm glad. Because Finney then segues into an utterly charming story. Where the Cluetts Are is about a couple who builds a Victorian house, accurate down to gas lamps and wrap-around veranda. Over the first few months of living there, they choose to inhabit that time period. They dress for it, read the books of the time, and drive around in horse and buggy. Somehow it works for them, and their architect simply admires their resolve.
A dreamy story called Home Alone is about a man building a balloon and floating above Marin County for two glorious nights. I loved imagining myself on that balloon, and seeing all the nighttime sights of San Francisco.
And Hey, Look at Me!, which is a soliloquy about grief, loss, and ghosts who need to be seen and remembered. In my own grieving, I've learned how we feel lost without that person who died. In this story, the protagonist also feels lost, but so does his friend who died. It gave me chills.
Another story, I'm Scared, has become urban legend and is referenced by other authors. Finney was a giant of time-travel fantasy, writing and publishing until his death at 84 in 1995.
My conclusions
There are several other stories in this collection, all of them unique and thought-provoking. Finney has a cinematic style, evidenced by how many of his works ended up onscreen. I'm in awe of authors whose writing is intensely evocative in so few pages. Finney allows us to inhabit his imagination throughout this short book. He was a time-travel treasure.
I started out About Time with relatively low hopes. I loved Contents...but time travel? Not exactly my thing. However Finney's knack for creating instantly relatable, simple charac
I had to read a Finney story (Contents of the Dead Man's Pockets) for a high school lit class a few years back and absolutely loved it. Unfortunately, due to my extreme procrastination, it's taken me 5 years to track down and set out to read any of his other stuff. Thankfully, though, I never forgot my desire to do so!I started out About Time with relatively low hopes. I loved Contents...but time travel? Not exactly my thing. However Finney's knack for creating instantly relatable, simple characters drew me in once more, and I immediately remembered why I fell in love with Contents.
This is a wonderful collection of easily-digestible and lovably quirky stories . I think there were only 2 that didn't absolutely hook me in (Second Chance & Lunch-Hour Magic). (due to that I would really like to give it 4.5 stars....those 2 were a bit difficult to get through- but the other 10 were so great that I didn't have the heart to knock it down to a measly 4 stars!)
Highlights:
The Third Level
Such Interesting Neighbors
Of Missing Persons
Hey, Look At Me!
But really, all 12 of the stories are worth reading...I will definitely be reading more Finney very, very soon!!
...moreThough a few of them do feel slightly dated (as one would expect when reading something more than a half century old), they're wonderfully imaginative, and
Looking back on the books I've read in 2018, I realize that although I've taken in collections of poems, essays, and diaries, this Jack Finney anthology is the only actual batch of short STORIES that I've consumed all year! I'm glad I squeezed it in, as I completely enjoyed these tales, perhaps even more than the novels of his which I've read.Though a few of them do feel slightly dated (as one would expect when reading something more than a half century old), they're wonderfully imaginative, and some would make for great TV or film adaptations.
To be clear, about 1/4 of these aren't actually about time travel, but with the exception of one strange and slightly whimsical tale, they do all deal with temporal/supernatural disturbances. I can't pick a favorite story from the lot, but I can single out my favorite passage from the book: the final sentences of a story called "I'm Scared," which holds as true today as when first published in 1957:
"We live on a planet well able to provide a decent life for every soul on it, which is all ninety-nine of a hundred human beings ask. Why in the world can't we have it?"
...moreMy initial thought, after reading the first story and realizing I was going like this book, was that I would ration the stories, one per day so I could stretch out my enjoyment. But similar to when I try to ration chocolate so I can enjoy it for longer, before I knew it, I had read half the book and didn't want to stop.
I almost gave this one 5 stars. I loved most of the stories and I will definitely be reading it again. But in light of the fact that there were a few stories I didn't love and there were pervasive sexist overtones throughout the book, which are clearly a product of their time (most of the stories are set in the 50s and 60s), but were still slightly annoying, I'm officially calling it 4.5 stars.
...more'Such interesting Neighbors' is one of the better stories in this collection. It foresees a time when time machines are available to the masses . Mr. Finney envisions a stark future.
'The Coin Collector' was also very interesting, albeit, a bit disturbing. It made me think of
There are 12 stories in the book, so the 4 stars are based on my general impression of them all. I was surprised to find that two of these stories are not time travel stories at all. Still, they were somewhat quirky and fun.'Such interesting Neighbors' is one of the better stories in this collection. It foresees a time when time machines are available to the masses . Mr. Finney envisions a stark future.
'The Coin Collector' was also very interesting, albeit, a bit disturbing. It made me think of polygamy, in a way.
I didn't realize I had previously read 'Of Missing Persons' until near the end. It hit me then that I read this story many years ago. It may have been required reading in Middle school or perhaps something I read in Reader's Digest in my early teens. It hit me as a story of trust and faith and also of regret.
'Second Chance' - well, besides the fact that it was a story about second chances, the story makes the reader feel that someone really is watching over us all and mistakes can be corrected. Based on this story, I doubt Mr. Finney was an atheist.
'Home Alone' is the better of the two non-time travel stories. It's a whimsical fantasy of hot air ballooning.
In my opinion, Mr. Finney wrote the best time travel book ever - 'Time and Again.' It isn't fair to compare these stories with that novel for obvious reasons - in a novel you have much more time to flesh-out the characters and the story line. Still, this is an enjoyable collection that should entertain most readers - especially those who are intrigued by the concept of time travel.
...moreThe better stories in this collection weren't about time travel though, like the whimsical Bradbury-style "Home Alone" about a bored guy home alone while his wife and kid are away. He decides to build a hot air balloon and go floating across the city at night, picking up a housewife neighbour on the way. Of the time travel stories, one about a teenager travelling in time
A pleasant collection of stories mostly about time travel from the guy who wrote the classic "Invasion of the body snatchers".The better stories in this collection weren't about time travel though, like the whimsical Bradbury-style "Home Alone" about a bored guy home alone while his wife and kid are away. He decides to build a hot air balloon and go floating across the city at night, picking up a housewife neighbour on the way. Of the time travel stories, one about a teenager travelling in time using a classic car he builds himself reminded me of Back to the Future.
My favourites: The Coin Collector where a guy travels to an alternate universe on the flip of a coin, and Face in the Photo about a detective who discovers missing criminals in old photos (nice twist to this one), and Of Missing Persons (misleading title) about a travel agency that sends people to a utopia on another planet (good twist in this one too) but not really time travel. "Lunch Hour Magic" with its junk shop (Needful Things) xray glasses and love potions was a bit cringeworthy.
The stories do have one thing in common: escape from the everyday.
Overall, enjoyable if a little out dated.
...moreI found the narrator's voice, filled with slang and references to pop culture of the time, distracting in most of the stories. These are pretty much one-idea stories, like episodes of The Twilight Zone or Amazing Stories (as opposed to a story with a hundred new ideas, like "Burning Chrome.") The better ones are reminiscent of stories by Ray Bradbury or Roald Dahl.
Most of the stories are nostalgic for a simpler, prettier, more innocent time-- by which he means the 1880s and 1890s, more or less. ...more
I love the wistful longing for the wonders of the past that permeate Finney's time travel tales. While I may skip one or two upon re-reading, this book is definitely going to If all of the stories included were actually about time, I'm sure I would have given this five stars; those stories were generally just what I was looking for from the author of one of my favourite books. But the few stories included which strayed a little from this unifying thread tended to be a bit misogynistic and dated.
I love the wistful longing for the wonders of the past that permeate Finney's time travel tales. While I may skip one or two upon re-reading, this book is definitely going to stay on my shelf. ...more
A collection of 12 short stories about time travel.
A reminder why I read books! For the "if". What if that happened? what if its true? what if its possible!?
The stories start off in the 1950s, which I'm a sucker for and the book it was mentioned in was Stephen Kings 'On Writing' where he credits Jack Finney for inspiration. I definitely can see that.
Who doesn't have a "growing rebellion against the present"
My imagination is roaring. Thanks for the fun Finney.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐A collection of 12 short stories about time travel.
A reminder why I read books! For the "if". What if that happened? what if its true? what if its possible!?
The stories start off in the 1950s, which I'm a sucker for and the book it was mentioned in was Stephen Kings 'On Writing' where he credits Jack Finney for inspiration. I definitely can see that.
Who doesn't have a "growing rebellion against the present"
My imagination is roaring. Thanks for the fun Finney.
...moreOne of the best stories in the book is called "Lunch Hour Magic," and it was a fun read about a guy who likes to visit odd shops and stores within the city during his daily lunch break. He finds some interesting product
Best collection of short stories I've ever read and all with some element of time travel involved, which I love reading about. I also enjoyed the 1950s style of writing that these stories are based in. Even without the time travel, I like reading of that simpler time of Americana.One of the best stories in the book is called "Lunch Hour Magic," and it was a fun read about a guy who likes to visit odd shops and stores within the city during his daily lunch break. He finds some interesting products for sale in one such store, but when he returns for more of the same product, he ends up buying another new / different product instead that is even more intriguing than the last. Great ending to that one. A lot of these stories have the aura and charm of an old episode of The Twilight Zone.
Often, books appeal to different people in different ways. Based on a person's own life experiences, he/she will favor some stories and books over others. I liked the way the author took one theme of time travel and wrote 12 original stories on the subject, each one taking a different approach to the novelty of the idea. For example, one story focused on the opportunity to get a second chance at correcting a regret. Another story focused on how much simpler and charming the life of a generation ago would be today. Yet another one introduced the idea that if you could go back in time and change something in the past, it might have a positive impact on the lives of everyone for years into the future. Out of the 12 stories in the book, none of them had similar plots. That's not easy to do when all dozen stories share a common thread.
I rarely give 5 stars for a book, but this one is special. It's even more rare that I keep a book after reading it, but I'm going to hang on to this one for a re-read.
...moreMy favorites from this collection: "I Love Galesburg in the Springtime", a story that will go right to the heart of the type of person who'd rather drive on a state highway than an interstate; and "Such Interesting Neighbors" - the closest to pure sci-fi that these stories come, and yet it's still light and fun.
...moreI first read about these when I was a teenager in one of my favorite books, Stephen Kin
Wow. Fantastic. His style is very familiar to me. I'd read Invasion of the Body Snatchers over 10 years ago, and I enjoyed it, but this is incredible. Now I will have to read his "Time and Again" series. That might be the first time that I ever read a collection of short stories straight through like that, in a matter of a few days. I want to make a few of them into movies, of course. They would be beautiful!I first read about these when I was a teenager in one of my favorite books, Stephen King's Danse Macabre. I re-read the section on Jack Finney just now, and it is astounding that he really had nothing to do with the original Twilight Zone television series, seeing as how his writing is so very Twilight Zone in its themes and approach, and how these were published a few years before Serling's show. The Twilight Zone is my favorite TV show, and reading this collection of stories was like discovering wonderful new episodes, or like I was reading the inspiration for most of the shows!
...moreMr. Finney, whose original name was Walter Braden Finney, was born in Milwaukee and attended Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois. After moving to New York and working in the advertising industry, he began writing stories for popular magazines like Collier's, The Saturday Evening Post and McCall's.
His first novel, Five Against the House (1954), told the story of five college students who plot to rob a casino in Reno. A year later he published The Body Snatchers (later reissued as Invasion of the Body Snatchers), a chilling tale of aliens who emerge from pods in the guise of humans whom they have taken over. Many critics interpreted the insidious infiltration by aliens as a cold-war allegory that dramatized America's fear of a takeover by Communists. Mr. Finney maintained that the novel was nothing more than popular entertainment. The 1956 film Invasion of the Body Snatchers was remade twice.
Mr. Finney first showed an interest in time travel in the short-story collection The Third Level, which included stories about a commuter who discovers a train that runs between New York and the year 1894, and a man who rebuilds an old car and finds himself transported back to the 1920s.
He returned to the thriller genre in Assault on a Queen (1959) and tried his hand at comedy in Good Neighbor Sam (1963), a novel based on his experiences as an adman, played by Jack Lemmon in the film version.
In The Woodrow Wilson Dime (1968), Mr. Finney once again explored the possibilities of time travel. The dime of the title allows the novel's hero to enter a parallel world in which he achieves fame by composing the musicals of Oscar Hammerstein and inventing the zipper.
With Time and Again, Mr. Finney won the kind of critical praise and attention not normally accorded to genre fiction. Thomas Lask, reviewing the novel in The New York Times, described it, suggestively, as "a blend of science fiction, nostalgia, mystery and acid commentary on super-government and its helots." Its hero, Si Morley, is a frustrated advertising artist who jumps at the chance to take part in a secret project that promises to change his life. So it does. He travels back to New York in 1882, moves into the Dakota apartment building on Central Park West and experiences the fabulous ordinariness of a bygone age: its trolleys, horse-drawn carriages, elevated lines, and gaslights. This year Mr. Finney published a sequel to the novel, From Time to Time.
Mr. Finney also wrote Marion's Wall (1973), about a silent-film actress who, in an attempt to revive her film career, enters the body of a shy woman, and The Night People (1977). His other fictional works include The House of Numbers (1957) and the short-story collection I Love Galesburg in the Springtime (1963). He also wrote Forgotten News: The Crime of the Century and Other Lost Stories (1983) about sensational events of the 19th century.
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