Invictus by Ryan Graudin
This was another book from my declined galley list, so my curiosity won out (as it usually does), and I found Invictus to be a nice treatment of time travel. Mostly plausible with few headaches provided. Except the author fell into the typical trap of including the future in a novel, and I had a giant laugh when she described the events of 2020. But let's be real, who could have predicted 2020?
The characters and their interactions are what really make the story, though. Farway is born outside of time and causes a chain reaction that no one could have predicted. His crew of teenage misfits running the black market of history for the future is stretching things a bit, but it made for a page-turning read.
I think I liked the epilogue better than the rest of the book and really wish that would have been expanded on more instead of simply ending.
We have this great build up of story, and then it is stripped away. Guess I'm still left with a love-hate relationship with time travel novels.
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