Book 1 of Time Travel
Language: English
1 of 1993 Locus Award for Best SF Novel 3-award-winner BSFA 1992 Nominated Clarke 1993 Nominated Fiction Hugo 1992 Winner Hugo Award Winner Kurd Laßwitz-Preis Award: Best Foreign Novel Library - Science Fiction and Fantasy Locus SF 1993 Winner Nebula 1992 Winner Nebula Award Winner Nomination of 1992 BSFA Award for Best Novel Nomination of 1993 Mythopoeic Award for Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Adult Literature Nomination of 1993 SF Chronicle Award for Novel Novel Science-Fiction Time Travel Time Traveling _isfdb bsfa award for best novel finalist hugo award for best novel finalist hugo award for best novel winner locus award for best sf novel nebula award for best novel finalist nebula award for best novel winner
Publisher: Bantam Spectra
Published: Jul 2, 1992
Description:
Amazon.com Review
Connie Willis labored five years on this story of a history student in 2048 who is transported to an English village in the 14th century. The student arrives mistakenly on the eve of the onset of the Black Plague. Her dealings with a family of "contemps" in 1348 and with her historian cohorts lead to complications as the book unfolds into a surprisingly dark, deep conclusion. The book, which won Hugo and Nebula Awards, draws upon Willis' understanding of the universalities of human nature to explore the ageless issues of evil, suffering and the indomitable will of the human spirit.
From Publishers Weekly
This new book by Hugo- and Nebula-award-winning author Willis ( Lincoln's Dreams ) is an intelligent and satisfying blend of classic science fiction and historical reconstruction. Kivrin, a history student at Oxford in 2048, travels back in time to a 14th-century English village, despite a host of misgivings on the part of her unofficial tutor. When the technician responsible for the procedure falls prey to a 21st-century epidemic, he accidentally sends Kivrin back not to 1320 but to 1348--right into the path of the Black Death. Unaware at first of the error, Kivrin becomes deeply involved in the life of the family that takes her in. But before long she learns the truth and comes face to face with the horrible, unending suffering of the plague that would wipe out half the population of Europe. Meanwhile, back in the future, modern science shows itself infinitely superior in its response to epidemics, but human nature evidences no similar evolution, and scapegoating is still alive and well in a campaign against "infected foreigners."p. 204 This book finds villains and heroes in all ages, and love, too, which Kivrin hears in the revealing and quietly touching deathbed confession of a village priest.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.