Today’s stack is about time travel. Wait, didn’t that just happen last week? Maybe you’re stuck in a time loop.
In this book, time traveling is an ability that some people just develop, usually when they enter adulthood, and they find they’re able to walk through the mists of time—though it wreaks havoc on regular footwear. Fortunately, most first-timers end up in Pocket, a little village outside of time, the only place to get time boots with specially formulated soles that can survive these temporal trips.
It’s here in Pocket that we find Costumes for Time Travelers, a shop where you can get tailor-made outfits for any time period, whether you’re visiting the Renaissance or the Industrial Collapse. Calisto is an assistant to the store’s capable owner, and when Mena takes an unexpected leave of absence, she puts them in charge of the shop. But things get turned topsy-turvy when Fawkes arrives: he’s known as the “time savant,” and he travels through time like a leaf on the wind. He seems to know Calisto already even though it’s the first time they’ve met, and there’s something dangerous following him.
Costumes for Time Travelers is a time travel romance: Calisto and Fawkes have a relationship that may be a little reminiscent of The Time Traveler’s Wife, if only because Fawkes experiences moments in his life out of order, though that’s the main similarity. Who are the people chasing Fawkes—and now Calisto—and what is their aim? The pair end up racing through different eras to escape, and I liked the way that different characters perceive and manipulate time in different ways.
Although the story is told in the third person, each chapter usually has one character as a focus—I guess it’s called third-person omniscient limited. I’ve always found that a little bit disorienting at first because I don’t realize why I’m getting one character’s inner feelings but not the others, but I don’t always catch when it shifts to another character.
The central conflict involves some pretty creepy villains and high stakes, though I don’t want to give too much away there. The romance is sweet and the characters take their time getting to know each other, even though Fawkes has already experienced some moments of their relationship in the future. It’s not a very long book, but I love the way it introduces you to Pocket, this little place tucked away outside of time.
This book is probably more of a traditional romance novel than most of what I usually read—I wouldn’t necessarily call it a rom-com though there are certainly humorous scenes in it, and there are also some pretty steamy and explicit scenes later in the book. But before we get to that, let me tell you about the time loop.
Noelle Tom has a fairly mundane life as a mechanical engineer in Toronto. She’s reliable (which means she gets a lot of extra work dumped on her), deliberate, and ever since a break-up with a serious boyfriend several years ago, she’s decided that romance isn’t for her. It’s too unpredictable and she’s not interested in being hurt again. But then she eats some dumplings at a strange little booth at a night market, and she wakes up to find herself stuck in a loop—and soon she’s ready to try anything to get out of it.
As she goes about different iterations of her day, she eventually wonders if what she’s supposed to do is kiss somebody—kisses are supposed to break magic spells, right? But who would she kiss? Maybe Cam, a handsome brewery owner that she keeps running into at different places. Her first few attempts at flirting with him are definitely rom-com material, but when she hits the no-permanent-consequences phase of her time loop, she’s able to start taking some risks, and eventually they hit it off.
Well, except that every time she wakes up, things have reset and Cam doesn’t remember her at all… or does he? There are little signs that maybe some of their interactions are sticking with him, and Noelle wonders if he’s somehow key to getting out of this loop once and for all.
One of my favorite parts of this book is the way it plays with the question: what happens to everyone else who isn’t stuck in a time loop? What version of the world exists once the time loop ends? In almost every time loop story I’ve seen or read before, when the time loop ends, the world continues the last iteration of the day that the protagonist experienced. This book manages to introduce an alternative that I found really fascinating. If you love time loop stories, this one is worth reading for that alone. I don’t have as much of a read on how it ranks as a romance novel, but I did like Noelle’s journey through this weird relationship with its ups and downs: getting to take risks without fearing the consequences, but also the feeling of loss every time she had to start over. (And then the opposite when the loop ends: how do you behave when you know your partner will actually remember the things you do and say?)
Oh, and if you love Asian cuisine, this book is full of it. Noelle makes several trips back to the night market, figuring that her time troubles are somehow linked to the mysterious dumplings she ate, so over the course of the book we get a smorgasbord of different dishes that she tries. There’s also a few different beers (since the brewery plays a significant role in the story), but not quite as many once she finds one that she likes.
That’s it for today. It’s a short stack because I’ve got a kid graduating from high school this week and things have been really hectic! If only I had a time machine…
Disclosure: I received review copies of these books. Affiliate links to Bookshop.org help support my writing and independent booksellers.
Source: geekdad.com