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Castaways in Time #2

The Seven Magical Jewels of Ireland

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TIME TRAP!

Drawn through a hole in time and space, twentieth-century American Bass Foster finds himself hailed as a noble warrior and chosen to command—first on land and then at sea—the armies fighting to preserve King Arthur III and his realm against the Church-led forces determined to place Arthur’s nephew on the throne of England.

But Bass is not the only traveler in time. And though the mysterious force which has exiled him to this land of knights in shining armor has brought other unexpected comrades-in-arms, it has also opened the gateway to a far future time and place. And suddenly Bass, Arthur, and their allies must face the menace of an unknown but deadly enemy seeking not only to overthrow Arthur’s kingdom but to conquer and enslave their whole world....

254 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 2, 1985

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About the author

Robert Adams

74 books68 followers
Franklin Robert Adams (August 31, 1933 - January 4, 1990) was an American science fiction and fantasy writer, formerly a career soldier. He is best known for his "Horseclans" books. He wrote as Robert Adams, an abbreviated form of his full name.

Adams was an early pioneer of the post-holocaust novel. His Horseclans novels are precursors to many of today's attempts at this type of story, many of which do not exhibit his painstakingly detailed world view or extraordinary plot follow-through (many of his Horseclans books are so interlinked that they make sense only when read in order; he did not create many "stand alone" books in the series).

Hallmarks of Adams' style include a focus on violent, non-stop action, meticulous detail in matters historical and military, strong description, and digressions expounding on various subjects from a conservative and libertarian viewpoint.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Jamie Barringer (Ravenmount).
1,015 reviews58 followers
January 21, 2016
This book was terrible, a macho romp through what I am guessing was meant to be a variation on our Earth, spliced with a dull biography of sorts on a gun-dealing, almost mob style Armenian family living in the US in the 1920's-60's. The story is disjointed and told as if the author is making every attempt at keeping from building any sort of momentum, let alone excitement. The title of the book, The Seven Magical Jewels of Ireland, is misleading, since practically none of this book takes place in Ireland. The conflict in Ireland seems to involve Brian Boru, who in real history died in April of the year 1014. Also involved in this story is King Arthur, who should be in the 5th-6th C. AD, several hundred years before Brian Boru's time. And, we have King James in England, as well, though it is not clear which King James he is. Various other recognizable leaders are also peppered throughout this book, none belonging to the same time period, and the world they are living in somehow has countries whose names and borders are actually quite modern, Germany in particular. The world's technology is a mix of various archaic eras that are supposed to contrast with the modern technology that a few modern men accidentally transported back in time contribute to the military might of King Arthur and the reigning Pope. The characters are a jumble, and most are so poorly developed that they amount to nothing but clutter, masking the lack of coherent plot.

Theoretically, according to the back of the book, there are deadly enemies from the future who factor into the story in an important way, but the futuristic people, when they show up, are a let-down. The first dies within seconds of her arrival, and three more show up later when no one is around to see them appear, and they are killed on arrival, electrocuted by the machine that brought them. So much for a deadly futuristic foe. And the 'magical jewels'? Well, some guy does come across a metal box with some shiny toys in it, but it is never clear what he has found, and those toys never reappear as anything important. I am guessing they were in Ireland, but maybe not, and only 2 were really described at all. King Brian does seem to want to gather in seven jewels that pertain to the kingships in Ireland, at least going by a passing remark near the end of the book, but the way this book is written, most of this sort of information is provided as semi-coherent private mumblings, not narration or dialogue, just a sort of formalize stream of consciousness ranting that goes on between the few paragraphs of active story.

And, for any modern reader, the machoism of this book is a bit painful, with no central female characters. The female characters that do appear are Krystal, who used to be in the military before she was displaced in time and is now stuck as a stay-at-home mom in a sexist world while her husband is off gallivanting and killing people, the futuristic female scientist who arrives back in time and is killed by the men waiting by the time machine, and the woman back in the US who became the lover of the wife of one of the Armenian gun-dealers, before he got into the guns business. This last woman may have murdered this Armenian man's wife, so he and his buddies kidnap her and torture her into a confession, very self-righteously. This man had also tried to get his wife committed, for her mental deviance (lesbianism) and, oh yeah, also for her drug addiction and prostitution, because obviously when a woman turns lesbian she also becomes a prostitute and gets into strong drugs.

I could imagine the man in Confederacy of Dunces might have enjoyed a book like this when he was in middle school, and young men who live in their parents' basements and spend their lives playing video games and eating frozen dinners, daydreaming of making girls like them, might enjoy this book. Everyone else may be a bit annoyed by it.
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,417 reviews61 followers
January 25, 2016
If you like displaced people in time then this series is for you. Robert Adams does an excellent job of telling the troubles and adventures of this houseful of modern people jerked back to medieval Europe and their effect on history. Highly recommended
Profile Image for Charles.
Author 41 books290 followers
July 26, 2010
Second in the series. Better than the first, I thought.
Profile Image for Tome Addiction .
487 reviews3 followers
March 25, 2021
Rober Adams rambled on a bit with this one, but filled with bits of action and detailed descriptions of the weapons.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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