At 46 years old and on the precipice of his 30th high school reunion, Craig Pelling’s life has turned out to be somewhat of a disappointment. He is massively overweight and balding, and stuck in a miserable, loveless, and childless marriage with a deeply unhappy woman. For the past 26 years, Craig has worked as a store manager for a now-struggling tech company that is about to be shut down by a high school bully, who holds a long-stranding grudge against him for unknown reasons.
Craig also has a poor relationship with his father. And his parents are about to sell his childhood home due to their failing health.
It wasn’t always like this. Back when he was 16 years old, Craig’s future had promise. Sure, he was a bit nerdy and awkward, but he was also slim, ambitious, creative and intelligent, with good grades and a talent for computer programming. Craig was even in the process of programming his own game that revolved around a protagonist who could repeatedly go back in time to rewrite his past, in order to prevent a tragic event that was destined to happen in his future.
Craig believes that his troubles began in earnest on a fateful day in 1986 when he lost his virginity to his dream girl, Tessa Lawrence, who is destined to see him at their 30th year high school reunion. Will fate, a little magical realism, and some computer science allow Craig to right the wrongs of his past, and provide himself with the future he feels that he deserves?
As is becoming a bit of a trend with me, The 86 Fix and I got off to a rocky start. Craig was initially introduced as a bitter character, who despite his own physical and financial shortcomings, spoke caustically about his wife’s aging appearance, the place where he worked, and his coworkers. He also seemed to have that oh-so-tropey, and pathetic, fixation on his high school dream girl. This was frustratingly coupled with a belief that, despite all evidence to the contrary, reuniting with said Dream Girl at his reunion would fix everything.
However, as the story progressed, I grew to appreciate Craig and genuinely root for him. As Craig describes the circumstances that got him to the place where he is today, he shows a refreshing amount of self-awareness, and empathy for the shortcomings of others. He recognizes and takes ownership of the poor choices he made in his life, in a way protagonists in these type of time travel novels often don’t manage, until it is too late. Craig’s desire to make changes in his life, stems not just from a selfish wish to improve his own circumstances, but those of the people around him as well.
As for his adolescent dalliance with Tessa, well there appears to be more than meets the eye to that situation as well . . .
I’m a huge sucker for a time travel / alt world novel, and, ultimately, The 86 Fix was no exception. It’s a lightning quick read. It’s well written. It’s drily British humored. The events leading up to Craig’s time travel are, if not entirely scientifically sound, deftly plotted, in a way that rewards eagle eyed readers, by tying seemingly innocuous details into payoff points later in the story.
As for Craig’s trip to 1986, it is filled with precisely the amount of nostalgia for a simpler time, ruminations on youth, and introspection regarding the passage of time that you would expect from a Back to the Future-inspired novel like this.
I didn’t, however, love the abrupt cliffhanger ending to this novel. It seemed like a greedy ploy to get me to immediately read the second book in this series (which, obviously, I will), so that my mind doesn’t have to leave poor Craig where I found him in the final pages of The 86 Fix. While I understand the need for an expansion of this tale, I do wish The 86 Fix functioned just a bit better as a standalone, and offered up a slightly less miserable ending.
That said, if you like time travel, nostalgia / coming of age, and alt universe tales, and are willing to immediately commit to a two-book series, I highly recommend The 86 Fix.