Looking to leap back into the early 90's? Don't want to spend a small fortune on Quantum Leap DVDs? This novel won't substitute for the series, but if you're anxious to briefly rejoin Sam, Al, Ziggy and the rest, it'll do.
Sam leaps into the recent past to find that he's part of a love triangle during a medieval festival. He's leaped into the body of the man who created an integral component to project Quantum Leap that may be the cause of Sam's seemingly random travel through time. "This time it's for me," Sam desperately concludes. Soon enough, however, Alia, the evil leaper, appears, prepared to foil Sam's plan.
Rawn captures well enough the characters and the general mood of the show, using her creativity to give added perspective on the characters' backgrounds and thought processes. She gives us a window on what's happening in the present (or is it the future?) and how Sam's wife Donna copes with Sam's fate and her own. I lost track of Quantum Leap during its final season and felt that the show started to meander some at that point, so it was a bit of a disappointment for this novel to be situated, chronologically, so late in the game. I suppose, however, that my biggest frustration was that I felt I had to create a book cover to hide what I was reading. I am a proud fan of the Quantum Leap television series, but somehow carrying a slim, TV-based volume with a picture of Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell and the sci-fi lettering of the title on the cover didn't improve my self-image. I guess it doesn't really matter; if I'm going to escape, I don't want anyone else around to distract me anyway. So lock yourself in your bedroom for a few hours and enjoy a leap to the past.