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Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait
 
 

Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait [Kindle Edition]

K. A. Bedford
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

Product Description

In the future, Aloysius "Spider" Webb will journey to the End of Time...

For now, Spider must be content with repairing broken time machines, rebuilding his life and avoiding the lunatic antics of his boss, Dickhead McMahon.

Spider's life is status quo until he discovers inside a broken second-hand time machine, the corpse of a brutally murdered woman from the future. The Department of Time and Space steps in to manage the situation — leaving Spider asking a lot of questions that only lead to more questions; unsettling evidence, brewing trouble, and the knowledge that Spider himself might be involved in an epic battle for control of time itself.

Will his knowing the future be a curse or a blessing? and will Spider Webb really find out how things turn out before they happen? With his new found knowledge, who can Spider trust?

One thing is certain: it will all happen before the End of Time!
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K.A. Bedford was born in Fremantle, Western Australia, in 1963. He attended Curtin and Murdoch Universities, and studied Writing, Theatre, and Philosophy.
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Other books by K. A. Bedford:

Hydrogen Steel
Eclipse
Orbital Burn
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Testimonials:

"...it is a very pacey read for most of the book, it has – unlike much SF – a decent set of female characters and there are touches of time travel genius and effective paranoia inducing scenes." — Mark Pack, Reviewer

"Bedford is funny in a crazed, Rudy Rucker kind of way. While Rucker writes of gonzo theorists, Bedford writes of the gonzo mechanics who keep the machines running." — Fred Cleaver, Denver Post

"I wasn’t crazy about the cover on this one, but the contents are pretty neat. Close your eyes until you’ve opened the book and you should be all right." Don D'Ammassa

"The author skillfully manipulates Spider's travails and travels through time. And he does time travel, both slightly backward and far forward, as his personal life both unravels and resolves itself. He does end up meeting other versions of himself, but the author helps both Spider and the reader out by referring to these alternates as Soldier Spider or Near Future Spider. If you relish the conundrums of time travel and enjoy the slightly off-kilter perspective from the opposite side of the world (Australia), this story of a man attempting to both solve a mystery and come to terms with his life will provide a pleasurable escape from present day reality." - SF Revu


"The local Western Australia ambiance provides a unique perspective that is quite consistent with the gonzo aspects of the story. Bedford has created a science-fiction novel that is sure to please most SF fans." — D. Douglas Fratz, Sci-Fi

"Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait is a fast-moving novel that will appeal to the reader who appreciates complicated plot lines, murder, and amusing dialogue." Highly Recommended — Ronald Hore, CM Magazine


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 606 KB
  • Print Length: 320 pages
  • Publisher: EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing; First edition (8 Dec 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B006JTRVHQ
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #220,018 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Mark Pack TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
K.A. Bedford's science fiction time-travel murder mystery was short-listed for the 2008 Philip K Dick award and the comparison with the master of dystopian, paranoid, time-twisted mystery plotting shows both the book's strengths and its limitations. It is a good, enjoyable book - but not in the Philip K Dick class, which makes the question of whether or not to read it dependent on what else you have already read.

Bedford's book starts off in promising Philip K Dick style, with a near future, set for once not in America but instead Australia. It is a future where time machines have become a mass consumer good, widely available and widely used. The hero, "Spider" Webb, has a low-paid job repairing them, a personal life that is a mess, a troubled past, a dreadful boss - and then a dead body enters his life. So far, so good.

However, whilst Webb's life is skilfully and painfully drawn, the question of time travel is not. For a story that hinges so heavily on what people can and cannot do with time travel, it is regrettable that the story's internal logic when it comes to time travel, altering events and grandfather paradoxes is so very limited. There is passing promise with the idea that the government has regulated to deliberately cripple time machines but the implications - hackers who side-step the rules or secret government teams that never have to follow them - are only lightly touched on. A few deft touches of humour appear, such as over the problem with too many time travel tourists causing congestion at the Crucifixion, but soon we are into the territory of characters only apparently doing things because that is what the author says they do.

As the strains from the lack of a time travel logic show, the plot slightly loses its way, taking a turn towards a far-future battle for the preservation of the universe before becoming a time-chasing attempt to solve a murder and then ending with a very weak finale that makes you feel like you have been set up to go buy a sequel.

Despite all that, it is a very pacey read for most of the book, it has - unlike much SF - a decent set of female characters and there are touches of time travel genius and effective paranoia inducing scenes. So set off with the right expectations and you can find much to enjoy.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  9 reviews
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A refreshingly original adventure! 1 Jun 2010
By Skylark - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I have a bit of a love-hate relationship with science fiction. On one hand, I love reading about incredible future technologies and 'what-if' future scenarios... but on the other hand, I can't stand the horribly overused cliches that 90% of the books in the genre use, like galactic empires, everybody using military titles all the time, spaceship jargon, pioneer colonies on alien worlds and the token telepath, etc etc. 'Time Machines Repaired While-U-Wait' was fortunately the kind of science fiction story that I love!

One thing that immediately endeared me to this story was the lack of made-up technical jargon. The characters in this story (despite being largely technicians and engineers) speak like real people, and I could actually understand what they were talking about. For example, wouldn't you much rather read something like: "Looks like we can power down the Cave," than: "Roger, Commander. Adjust velocity-directive 70452 to warp setting 9 above Red Delta level Alpha 6 and ensure that all systems are inoperative"? I know engineers occasionally get reputations for being odd, but I can't bring myself to believe they'd ever actually speak in such cold, meaningless terms, even in the distant future. Pet peeve.

It wasn't just the way the characters spoke, either. They really came across as being real people. Characters were placed in some pretty horrid situations, and I thought their subsequent reactions were utterly believable and understandable. Again compared to the 'bad' kind of science fiction, I felt that these characters were so much more human and easy to relate to, and that's extremely important for me in a book.

The light-hearted tone was also really nice to read. Again, I feel that many sci-fi books take themselves way too seriously. People just don't act that unemotionally in real life. I thought this story had exactly the right balance between the odd little foibles of life and the gravity of the situations the characters were forced into to make it very believable. For the first chapter, I thought it was going to be a humourous novel - but as I read on, I realised it was actually more of an insight into how people would really be likely to act if this technology ever did become real. Because people *are* humourous in real life, and *do* make mistakes, and *do* start taking new things for granted quite quickly.

The other thing I loved about this story was the technology of the world. Time machines were just the beginning - there were artificial universes and ultra-advanced medicine as well. Just the idea of time travel being available to everyone, including the average layperson, was fantastic to see! (I can only take so many stories of amazing technology being restricted to the hands of secret organisations and governments at war, really.) Little comments, such as one made by a character whose grandson regularly visited her from the future, made the technology seem more vivid, more realistic.

In short, this book ignores all the cliches that have built up around the science-fiction genre over the years, and this is an excellent, excellent thing. It's a sci-fi adventure that focuses on the adventure part and doesn't worry too much about the details of how the technology works. And that's the way it should be, I think.

I'd give this book 4.5 stars if Amazon allowed it, but have to settle for four since it doesn't. Definitely worth a read!
Comedy:) & Tragedy:( 21 Dec 2011
By LydiaEncyclopaedia - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition
Interesting characters, with warts and all! Great story, plot so thick you could stand a spoon up in it! Impossible situations, both heart warming and heart wrenching!
I love the humour that pervaded this story even when Spider(s) were low. I like the realistic understanding of despair and hope without it being depressing. I like that the scifi was relaxed in technicality yet exciting in utility. This was a modern tale of crime, overtime and end of time and I loved it!
Fun rompy time travel comedy 14 Dec 2011
By Lee Sergei - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition
Humerous Sci-Fi story without getting whacky. Not "Douglas Adams" humor - but a low key approach that will appeal to fans of writers like Joseph Heller. The book shows that while you can break the laws of time and space, you can't escape the laws of unintended consequences.
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