The Map of Time

The Map of Time (Trilogía Victoriana #1)

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3.37 of 5 stars 3.37  ·  rating details  ·  4,955 ratings  ·  1,295 reviews
Set in Victorian London with characters real and imagined, The Map of Time boasts a triple play of intertwined plots in which a skeptical H.G. Wells is called upon to investigate purported incidents of time travel and to save lives and literary classics, including Dracula and The Time Machine, from being wiped from existence.

What happens if we change history? The author ex...more
Paperback, 514 pages
Published June 9th 2011 by HarperCollins (first published January 1st 2008)
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Traci
The less said about this book the better. Do you enjoy magic tricks even though it's all sleight of hand? Can you simply enjoy the construction of a novel? I loved every moment I spent with this new and talented author. A little bit of The Prestige, some Neil Gaiman, completely original. I'm not even sure where to put this title. Fantasy? Fiction? Science Fiction? Steampunk? It's all of these. One of the best, and one of my favorites, of the year. Beautifully written.
Kelly Leigh
Sep 29, 2011 Kelly Leigh rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone with a pulse and even those without
I adore this book so much so that it has made the quantum leap onto the coveted "How do I love thee let me count the ways" virtual Goodreads shelf. At this moment in time I am struck speechless about how much I love and enjoyed reading The Map of Time, so I must formulate my thoughts before I write them down otherwise they'll be a gabbling mess. But I will say this: I love Señor Palma's mind in all its creative glory.

Okay, a week later thoughts have been formulated. Here goes . . .
I’ll start o...more
Velma
Jan 22, 2012 Velma rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: someone willing to edit it. heavily.
Time travel! Jack the Ripper! Automatons! What's not to love?!? Well, as it turns out, almost everything.

I know everyone else here is raving about it, but I could barely stomach The Map of Time; it took every ounce of stick-to-it-iveness I could muster to get through this convoluted, interminable literary maze. WHERE, I ask you, was the EDITOR in this hot mess? There is the kernal of a potentially good story here, had about 2/3 of the fat been excised. The only way it could have been more byzant...more
Laura
I was so excited to get this book - the back flap suggests a Jasper Ffordian adventure starring H.G. Wells. However... not so much. This novel is in three parts, only lightly interwoven. One of those threads is H.G. Wells, another is Gilliam Murray and his Trip to the Year 2000. The author has written this as a pastiche of Victorian novels, filled with digressions, overly adjectived, and a tad rambling.

Part One is the story of Andrew, an upper-middle class boy who falls in love with a beautiful...more
Чанко Попчев
Тъжна и светла история, разказвана от ... разказвач. Превключването в стила на разказване подчертава силата на разказа.
Завързаното действие минава през проститутките на Уайтчапъл, Джак Изкормвача, влюбен английски богаташ, Лондон през 2000-та година и началото на писането и четенето на научната фантастика (или фантазия?) като стил в литературата. Да не забравяме и повея на Steam Punk-а, лъхащ от книгата.
Мекия изказ и натрапчиво описаните сцени засядат в мозъка и след минути оживяват самостоятелн...more
Paul Pessolano
The Map of Time” by Felix J. Palma, published by Atria Books.

Category – Sci/Fi/Fantasy

In Victorian England one could go to Murray’s Time Travel and be transported to the year 2000. They could witness the climatic conclusion of a fight for world domination between Solomon, the King of the Automatons, and Captain Derek Shackleton, the last hope for the human race.

The story begins with Andrew Harrington, from a well to do family, contemplating taking his life because his new found love, a prostitut...more
William Thomas
Felix Palma is a fairly talented writer of prose, but not a talented storyteller. Not in the least. Although the writing is smooth and velvety, the book is actually a jumble of confused plot lines mixed up in a hundred different stories that do nothing to capture the imagination or tie up the frayed ends.

I'm not a fan of time-travel stories. I think they're terrifically lazy. They seem to me to be so popular because everyone fantasizes about traveling through time- mostly in some selfish way th...more
Alicia


There is so much going on in this book that I feel trying to explain it all without giving spoilers is a herculean task. Therefore I'm going to outline the aspects I enjoyed and disliked and be done with it.
One thing I will state now: if you have any intentions of reading H G Wells' "The Time Machine" read it before you read this book. Palma spoils the entire plot of this novel within the first few hundred pages, much to my horror and annoyance (seeing as I haven't read it yet.)
I liked the stor...more
Angela
The Map of Time is a wonderful novel in three parts. In the first, H.G. Wells assists in traveling to the past to prevent a murder. In the second, H.G Wells bridges the gap between the future and the present. In the third, H.G. Wells must make a decision that will chart the course of the future. The fist two stories contain romantic elements while the third is a bit of a mystery. All of the stories overlap a bit bringing different characters together at different points in time. The end result i...more
Mickey
Finally I can write my review, here it goes:


Plot:
Enter a world of wonder, intrigue and adventure …

London, 1896. Andrew Harrington’s beloved has been murdered by Jack the Ripper. Claire Haggerty longs to escape the constraints of Victorian society. For both, time is the problem: to escape it, to change it, might offer them the hope they need. As their lives become entangled with that of H.G. Wells — who is basking in the success of his novel The Time Machine — all three set off on a desperate fl...more
Donna
Dec 26, 2011 Donna marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: tbr-pile
DNF for only one reason: I couldn't keep dealing with the meandering plot. Everything else was fantastic. The writing was great, a beautiful translation (I've read some limp translations in my time). The voice sucked me right in as engaging and I couldn't wait to keep reading. The premise itself had me hooked and I wanted to know where it all went and ultimately ended up.

But damn it all if I had to deal with another multi-chapter aside that served as filler while the characters traveled or thoug...more
Alesha Hubbell
I won this book as a Goodreads First Read. And I really enjoyed it. It was not what I expected, but I can't tell too much in what ways because it'll give too much away. The three parts are very different and mostly very seperate stories, yet they go together in a perfect way. One of the characters who ties the stories together is the author H. G. Wells. This inclusion seemed an odd choice to me until the character appeared in the novel and then it seemed perfect. He easily was my favorite charct...more
Nadine
Andrew wünscht sich nichts sehnlicher, als die Zeit zurückdrehen zu können, um Jack the Ripper davon abzuhalten, seine geliebte Marie zu töten.
Claire wümscht sich eine Reise in die Zukunft, wo die Männer aufregender sind als im ausgehenden 19. Jahrhundert, wie der mutige Hauptmann Shackleton, der im Jahr 2000 als Anführer der Menschen gegen die Maschinen kämpft.
Glücklicherweise kann man Zeitreisen ja bei "Murrays Zeitreisen" buchen und dann wohnt ja auch noch H. G. Wells, der Autor von "Die Zeit...more
Fábio Ventura
Quando tomei conhecimento desta obra, fiquei bastante curioso. As histórias sobre viagens no tempo sempre me fascinaram pela sua complexidade e imaginação intrínseca. E com uma obra tão aclamada como é “O Mapa do Tempo”, de Félix J. Palma (vencedor o Prémio Ateneo de Sevilla 2008), o interesse neste livro intensificou-se. E felizmente as expectativas foram superadas.
A invenção de uma máquina do tempo por uma empresa, as Viagens Temporais Murray, lança o mote. Tendo como fio condutor as viagens...more
Oscar
Este libro es todo un homenaje a los precursores de la ciencia ficción, y a H.G. Wells en particular. Mediante todo un collage de personajes reales y de ficción, de novelas y de películas clásicas pertenecientes al fantástico y la ciencia ficción, Félix J. Palma ha construido un nuevo producto que se vale por sí mismo.

Londres, 1896. La novela empieza con Andrew Harrington escogiendo una pistola con la que suicidarse. El porqué no se puede contar, ya que se va desvelando en el transcurso de los c...more
Lisa
This is going to be a tough review to write.

I can tell you how The Map of Time by Felix J. Palma begins. I could possibly even tell you what the Map of Time is. But most everything else I would want to tell you, I can’t tell you. It would spoil something. And this is the sort of book where you really don’t want the plot twists spoiled.

First thing I loved about this novel: the Narrator. This is not just any omniscient narrator — this one has a charming voice and a lovely way to tell a story.

“Assu...more
Ben
This book's title is particularly apt. Reading the story feels like playing around with Google Maps. You start with a pinpoint address and spend several leisurely chapters focused exclusively on one character and one particular storyline - to the point where you get a bit bored. Then, as the book progresses, you pan outward and outward, little by little revealing a vast, complex landscape. And because the pan-out is so gradual, you don't even notice how complicated the story's universe is until...more
Life Between Coffee Spoons
I loved this book so much that it has taken me nearly three months to even think about writing a review. I'm not a big sci-fi/fantasy reader and I tend to get discouraged when it takes me a month to read something, but this one broke all those previous notions.

Palma seamlessly weaves together three separate but ultimately related stories that cross London in the late 1800s. Into these he perfectly integrates real and fictional characters, with H.G. Wells featured most prominently. The writing is...more
Jürgen Zeller
'"Ich bin ein Geschichtenerzähler, nicht mehr und nicht weniger. In früheren Zeiten hätte ich wahrscheinlich mit Gauklern und Barden auf dem Marktplatz gestanden und die Leute unterhalten."' Zitat von Ray Bradbury

Mit diesem Zitat möchte ich meine Rezension zu diesem höchst eigenartigen Buch beginnen, denn es passt vortrefflich zu diesem Roman. Es werden gleich mehrere Geschichten erzählt die eigentlich in sich abgeschlossen sind und vordergründig nichts miteinander zu schaffen haben. Ausser natü...more
John Wolter
Palma's tale of time travel in Victorian England has its moments, but there are a number of things that I found spoiled the story for me. To begin, the narrative of the story is frequently interrupted by the narrator, who makes a point to explain to us how he is going to narrate the next section, or to remind us that he is an omniscient observer of the events of the book. I kept expecting that by the end of the tale the author might reveal why this is important to the story, but he never did. I...more
Ricki Treleaven
This week, I read The Map of Time by Felix J. Palma. I did not accomplish much of anything else this week because the book is over 600 pages, and I could not put it down!

This is a very difficult post for me to write because I do not want to give away any spoilers. If you choose to read this book, try not to read any reviews because you do not want a single plot point in advance of reading this amazing book. I would like to give you a very loose idea of what the book is about so you will at least...more
Jonathan Scobie
My wife gave me this book as a Xmas present because she knows I'm a fan of Steampunk. But a fair way into the novel I bagan asking myself it really was 'Steampunk'. Having finished the novel, I feel that while Steampunk is a fairly broad church, Palma's novel is really a Don Quixotesque parody of Science Fiction, and our culture's idolatry of Science itself, in the same way that Cerventes was satirising the values of chivlary which had all but died out by his 17th Century. The novel's best featu...more
Amy
At the opening of this novel, I thought it was a little precious. The narrator is entirely omniscient (it sees the minds of the characters . . . and as it turns out everything in the world) and also directly addresses the reader. . . a little annoying at first. And the description on the back of the book bears almost no resemblance at all to what the book is about. . .

That being said, I loved this. I think to love it, there's a chance that the reader needs to be a fan of science fiction--and no...more
Angela
This book is baffling. It is a historical novel (yay) with a time travel angle (yay) and famous Victorians as characters (double yay). Jack the Ripper appears, as does Bram Stoker and Henry James. Plus, the author captures the sublime of Victorian fiction: exquisite beauty and horrific terrors, spoken in descriptive language that feels authentic.

And yet, this book is strange. The plot is a crazy mishmash of ideas, with characters picked up and dropped, and picked up again. The author sets param...more
Whatchyareading
Victorian. Time Travel.

Intrigued yet? Well, you should be because not only is it awesome, but also that’s essentially what Map of Time is about. It just toes the line at steampunk, though some might argue it easily falls into that category. And H.G. Wells is a main character! More literary authors should be written about in novels. It’s almost like bringing literature around full circle.

In a way, this book could be called three novellas starring H.G. Wells because it kind of felt that way. Even...more
Gena
I kept wondering what the author was thinking, doing and smoking when he wrote this. It is the most bizarre book I've read in a while. I think I kept reading because I couldn't believe it was so - so - odd. It's like 3 books put together, none of which make much sense. In the first part a guy wants to go back in time and stop Jack the Ripper from killing the woman he loves. The middle of the book deals with a guy who works for the company that provides Victorians with the touristy opportunity to...more
Kacey
In many ways, this was a wonderful novel that I thoroughly enjoyed from beginning to end. In others, it was an exhausting read that I'm glad is behind me.

I enjoyed each of the three stories as individual pieces. I enjoyed the clever way the author wove H. G. Wells into it. I couldn't say which of the stories was my favorite because they each had moments I enjoyed. I admit I can be a bit of a sucker for romance, so I enjoyed Tom and Claire's story a lot. Unfortunately all three stories had moment...more
Timothy Lewis

Tim: I just finished this book and I have to say it has one of the biggest jaw dropping reveals that I've seen or read. This is what M. Night Shyamalan could only wish he could do with every story he tells. Map of Time by Felix J. Palma has me wanting to read it all over again, just so I can find the clues that were there for the taking. There are three stories, told by a third party narrator, that interweave in and out of each other like a well choreographed tango. Each player knows the part th...more
Meredith Buchanan
Surprisingly, I had some trouble getting into the novel in the beginning (I think the fact that I’ve gotten accustomed to reading books for children might be part of the problem). Also, the book is told from several different perspectives, but that isn’t apparent at first. I don’t know if it was a wise choice to start out with Andrew Harrington, because quite frankly, I find him very whiny and unlikeable.

Andrew is one of those poor little rich boys, who is miserable until he falls in love with...more
Paul Lunger
Felix Palma's first American published book "The Map of Time" is an odd tale of time travel, parallel realities & love gone wrong. The story is told in 3 parts by an unknown narrator & opens with an apparent suicide attempt by Andrew Harrington & from there goes into the idea of time machines being real & the murders of Jack the Ripper in England in the 1880s. The only character of any consequence of reality in this tale is H.G. Wells whose story "The Time Machine" becomes the fo...more
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The Map of Time (Hardcover)
The Map of Time (Paperback)
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El mapa del tiempo (Trilogía Victoriana, #1)
The Map of Time (Paperback)

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Félix J. Palma was born in Sanlúcar de Barrameda, Spain on June 16, 1968. He attended Francisco Pacheco High School and studied Publicity at the University at Sevilla.

His first volume of stories, El Vigilante de la Salamandra (The Lizard's Keeper) showed his ability to introduce fantasy into the every day. He is also author of the storybooks: Métodos de Supervivencia (Methods of Survival), Las Int...more
More about Félix J. Palma...
The Map of the Sky El menor espectaculo del mundo Aquelarre La hormiga que quiso ser astronauta Steampunk. Antología Retrofuturista

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“(...) ¿qué era el tiempo si nadie podía medirlo, si nada podía acusar su paso? El tiempo solo se mostraba en las hojas secas, en las heridas que cicatrizaban, en la carcoma que devoraba, en el óxido que se extendía, y en los corazones que se cansaban. Si nadie estaba allí para señalarlo, el tiempo no era nada, absolutamente nada.” 11 people liked it
“He had learned from experience that what he succeeded in putting down on paper was only ever a pale reflection of what he had imagined, and so he had come to accept that this would only be half as good as the original, half as acceptable as the flawless, unachievable novel that had acted as a guide, and which he imagined pulsating mockingly behind each book like some ghostly presence.” 9 people liked it
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