Reviews

A Door Into Time by Shawn Inmon

k_champagne's review against another edition

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4.0

Boarded up wall is actually a time travel door that brings you to a post apocalyptic future where the remaining humans are at the bottom of the food chain.

I LOVED THIS CONCEPT

FRTC

larsdradrach's review against another edition

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3.0

Classic portal/Time travel novel without to much deep meaning.

It's entertaining and well paced, only complaint is the more or less identically sounding names of most of the characters, which makes it hard to follow at times.

I'm giving the next couple of books in the series a go as well.

nokip's review against another edition

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3.0

It's fine.

Very quickly definition of what is technology. Megaphone isn't technology, apparently, neither are skies, snowshoes, boats nor bows, but crossbows are.

toulousifer's review against another edition

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1.0

This reminded me of two other books I enjoyed immensely more: We are Legion (We are Bob), specifically the Deltan Camp/Archimedes storyline, and Olan Thorensen's Destiny's Crucible series, specifically the first book in the series.

In both cases, those books deal with how a visitor to primitive cultures can carefully and wisely introduce new technology. There's very little of this in this book, though the main premise is the same.

After binging a bunch of the excellent Middle Falls series by the same author, this was a huge disappointment. I struggled to make it to the end of the book, ramping up the speed higher than normal just to trudge through it.

The narrator is fine, except for the "native" language and names, as well as very little difference between narration and each character's speech patterns. The native names are too similar and eventually I realized it just didn't matter who was doing things or saying things...the narrator would have had to work really hard to make this work, and I don't think he was up to it.

bellasok's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5 ⭐️ I don’t read a lot of sci-fi but I’m extremely intrigued by time traveling plots and this definitely made me want to read more in the genre. I think the story is well written and fast paced, but would love some more plot twists or history around the world/time. The story is mainly based on current events and happenings in the village and not as much focus on the actual time traveling. Will definitely continue this series!

joshhall13's review

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2.0

I never know how to rate a book that I didn't enjoy but I see the value for others.

This book is good for lonely teenage boys that want escapism. However for me it was too full of pot holes and semi adolescent writing level.

philosopher_kj's review against another edition

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adventurous mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5


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rentimay's review against another edition

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adventurous tense fast-paced

4.0

ryanpfw's review

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4.0

I wasn’t sure where this one was going to go.

I am a big fan of Shawn Inmon and his Middle Falls series. By a few chapters in, I felt this book was not going to be for me, but I kept going because I’m a completist and have only DNFed five or six books in five or six hundred. It’s not the author’s fault. It’s difficult to jump genres and tones and have the same reaction. Reader preferences can be erratic.

The early chapters of this book are the weakest. We meet Alex Hawk, divorced father of a four year old, who inexplicably on his daughter’s birthday realizes what no inspectional services or housing accessor has caught, that his basement is clearly too short based on the foundation and there’s a hidden area. He knocks down two brick walls, finds a mysterious doorway, a note explaining that the last guy who walked through, well armed, never returned again, and faced with the understanding that his daughter is counting on him to be her parent, he arms himself and steps through the doorway.

It was a bonehead move. Could he even breathe on the other side? Did it lead to a thousand foot drop? The last guy who went through never returned. Did the last guy’s father, who left the note, experiment to see what was there? No idea. Perhaps we’ll find out in a future book. But as a dad, I found it a terribly boneheaded decision from a father who spends the rest of the book lamenting how much he misses his child.

The early chapters introduce us to the world of Kragdon-ah, set in a hyper-distant future Oregon. The character’s names and the verbiage of the world are somewhat similar and difficult to grasp, so I went chapters constantly looking up who was who, scene to scene. Eventually, entering part two of the book, I started to grasp things and pull more enjoyment, but that initial base left me weary.

I got to the halfway point thinking I would not continue with the series, and now I certainly will. This is why I stick with books, especially from authors whose work I love.

hoarderreader's review

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

2.75