"Time" is a frequent word in sf titles, and not necessarily in time travel fiction, e.g., Anderson's "The Horn of Time the Hunter." (And see here.) Anderson's The Corridors Of Time is appropriate and evocative and not only because there are literal corridors through time in the novel. See here. Does remembering your childhood feel like peering down a long corridor?
Andre Norton's The Crossroads Of Time evokes choices, decisions and historical turning points and implies the question: could there be a literal junction in the temporal dimension? Time is abstract but we like to compare it to a medium like water. Thus, I am currently reading Volume I of SM Stirling's time travel/alternative history trilogy:
Island In the Sea Of Time
Against The Tide Of Years
On The Oceans Of Eternity
"Against the tide of years" sounds like growing old. "On the oceans of eternity" sounds like realizing that a single life is short compared with everything before and after it.
Gregory Benford's Galactic Center Saga comprises "universe as water" titles:
- In the Ocean of Night (1977)
- Across the Sea of Suns (1984)
- Great Sky River (1987)
- Tides of Light (1989)
- Furious Gulf (1994)
- Sailing Bright Eternity (1996)
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
And of course there's the problem caused by Mercedes Lackey and Ellen Guon's book KNIGHT OF GHOSTS AND SHADOWS resembling far too much Poul Anderson's A KNIGHT OF GHOSTS AND SHADOWS. I can't help but think since PA used that title first, Lackey and Guon should have chosen a different title for their book.
Sean
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