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The Time Portal
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Official Group Giveaways > May - "The Time Portal" by Joe Corso and Deborah McCarthy

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message 1: by John, Moderator in Memory (new)

John | 834 comments Mod
Our featured book for this month's giveaway is The Time Portal by time travel group member Joe Corso and Debra McCarthy. Our question for this month's drawing is this:

"In this book, the hero takes objects from the past and auctions them in the present in order to become wealthy. If you could travel back in time and use that technology to become rich - how would you do it?"

Note: The author is offering the winner a choice between a signed paperback or an ebook edition of this book.

Anyone who posts an answer to the above question will be entered in our drawing. The winner will be selected at random and will be announced on May 8. So that means you have just one week to post your comments for a chance to win this book. Once a winner is announced, the author will contact him or her to arrange for delivery of the book.

I will invite Joe to post some additional info about his book. And please feel free to ask him any questions you might have. Also remember that the winner of this giveaway is encouraged to write an honest and thoughtful review of the book once they have a chance to read it. Good luck all, and "may the odds be ever in your favor."


message 2: by Joe (last edited May 01, 2013 08:35AM) (new)

Joe Corso | 8 comments I love time-travel books or movies. I thought what if I found myself somewhere in the past and discovered that not only could I return to the present but I could take something back with me that would be valuable in the present. Would I do that? Yes! I would . . but what about you, would you do the same? Would you take something of value back to the present back with you? If so - why?


message 3: by Steve (new)

Steve | 6 comments Because I'm a rare book collector and a Shakespeare buff, I'd bring back a copy of his lost play, "Cardenio." We know he wrote a play by that name, but no copy survived, so we don't know what it is.


message 4: by Joe (new)

Joe Corso | 8 comments Interesting. I never knew Shakespeare wrote a play ("Cardnio.") that was lost. I don't imagine many people do.


message 5: by Nancy (new)

Nancy Hendrickson (nancyhendrickson) | 1 comments I would bring back an artifact from the Lost City of Atlantis. Just think of the commotion THAT would cause!


message 6: by Ernie (new)

Ernie Wood | 15 comments Why, the Holy Grail, of course.


message 7: by Joe (new)

Joe Corso | 8 comments But what if you had no choice in where you went in the past? In "The Time Portal", the time traveler has to go where the portal takes him. What would you do? Would you still bring something back of value in the present if you could?


message 8: by Bill (new)

Bill Cleary | 66 comments Since you left the means open, I'd invest in Microsoft, Apple, and a few other tech stocks. I'd want to leave valuable artifacts alone.


message 9: by Kim (new)

Kim (greeneyes0727) | 1 comments I agree with Bill investing in opportunies loss would be one way to get rich from the past but would if I could travel back and bring things back to better my self (Get paid). The only thing I would worry about is if my actions would alter the future by changing the past! But I would so love to travel in the past!


message 10: by Travis (new)

Travis | 1 comments If people were allowed to know I was a time traveler and this was accepted- I'd shoot video of Christ's crucifixion or maybe some of the other major religious events.

Guaranteed to be earth shattering.

If I was incognito... Dinosaur DNA samples.


message 11: by Lincoln, Temporal Jester (new)

Lincoln | 1290 comments Mod
The Answer to the question is Bill's but you could invest in Oil, land, Real Estate...Owning the biggest gold vein in California...The largest oil deposit in Saudi Arabia..The Biggest diamond mine in South Africa...etc etc etc...you could be wealthier than anyone on earth.

The real question than becomes what do you buy with money? You buy POWER. Influence elections, run for President...Set yourself up as an oracle of the future making the cost of information a premium.

Course the unintended consequences would wreck havoc on the world, but oh man what a fun little sand box to play in.


message 12: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Gold is always good but heavy & investments would be good but that's not an object, per se.

So I'd bring back some Da Vinci notebooks, which were dispersed & most lost not long after he died.

They would be most valuable.


message 13: by Bill (new)

Bill Cleary | 66 comments Lincoln, after your comments, I had to travel back again and add to my investments. I'll let you keep your power.


message 14: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Martin (KevinDM) | 24 comments I would try to take something that was of value from a person who would use it for evil..... I would maybe take some coins for my collection also, just some to finish a collection.


message 15: by Joe (new)

Joe Corso | 8 comments I've written four Time Portal books and in each one the hero evolves as his powers coalesce. A lot of you have unknowingly touched on what may happen in future books.


message 16: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Martin (KevinDM) | 24 comments Are your books published?


message 17: by Michael (new)

Michael (michaeljsullivan) | 70 comments Hmmmm wouldn't really be able to get my hands on anything that is famous (like the Holy Grail or DaVinchi notebooks) so I guess I would go with something that was fairly easy to get then and rather expensive now. It seems from watching shows like Pawn stars weapons of any kind (guns, swords, knifes) that are in good condition would sell well - and they are easy to carry so I'd go with that.


message 18: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
I suppose that's where all the missing artwork of famous painters has gone, right? They're always turning up here and there for auction. I suppose the place to find your time travelers would be to stake out auctions for lost pieces of art.

I suppose raiding the library of Alexandria prior to the fire wouldn't be a bad idea.


message 19: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Amy wrote of: 'the library'

Amy, I'd thought of that but with Paul L's new book it may not have burned after all, just fell into disrepair, etc. & if so, the scrolls may show up yet.


message 20: by Joe (new)

Joe Corso | 8 comments Only one is, the others will be out soon.


message 21: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Martin (KevinDM) | 24 comments Nice


message 22: by Lincoln, Temporal Jester (new)

Lincoln | 1290 comments Mod
What about human genius...Einstein, forget about Da Vinci's notebooks or Shakespeare's plays, or any given artists art work. What about Da Vinci himself, Shakespeare himself. One of my favorite time travel games I like to play in my head is take a genius from the past and imagine how they might function given modern technology. Would it make genius lazy or expand on the possibilities aided by tech?


message 23: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
So here's my question: If you were to procure a document via time travel, wouldn't any testing determine that is was a fake based on the age of the paper? The only way you could really pass it off as the original document would be to hide it somewhere where it wouldn't be touched for all the years in between to be able to pass it off as authentic.


message 24: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Steven mentioned this:

Steven, with your choice pick I presume you don't hold with the theory concerning the 17th Earl of Oxford.

Many think Marlowe, as well, but he was much too busy being a spy, something I covered in my 2nd Epic Fable.

Yet, if you did get the play how would you prove its provenance, given there's nothing written in the Bard's own hand for purposes of comparison?


message 25: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Lincoln wrote: 'take a genius from the past and imagine how they might function given modern technology'

Lincoln, read Paul L's book; it does this:

The Plot to Save Socrates by Paul Levinson


message 26: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Amy, so here's my answer:

Just tie it to the outside of your machine, for then it would age properly, only very quickly during your return.

Perhaps in a knapsack, stuffed with a few other things, yes?


message 27: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
Howard wrote: "Amy, so here's my answer:

Just tie it to the outside of your machine, for then it would age properly, only very quickly during your return.

Perhaps in a knapsack, stuffed with a few other things,..."


Hmm ... I suppose if we had a time machine like the one in ... er ... The Time Machine, that might work. Or it might warp it beyond all recognition, requiring you to go back even further in time to get one that's not ruined. I think I'd be more likely to hide it in the wall of a building that exists in both time periods. And then when I go to procure it in the present, I'll have to be careful not to get arrested for trying to get into the building.


message 28: by Howard (last edited May 01, 2013 02:14PM) (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Amy, I live out in the middle of nowhere, in an area much untouched, so how about this?

You can dig a pit in the Past on my land & fill it with contemporary goodies & then fill it in.

Next, in the Present you come for lunch & lead me there & we'll excavate.

50/50 of course & you buy the gas for the machine.

Who knows what the Future will hold?


message 29: by Peter (new)

Peter (peterlean) | 236 comments I would bring back to the present one of the lost books of the library of Alexandria, before it burnt (Paul docet ;) )


message 30: by Anne (new)

Anne Barwell (anne_barwell) | 1 comments I second something from the library of Alexandria. Although it would have to be something that wouldn't change the future and a lot of what was in that library risks that as it was sadly a lot of lost knowledge that wasn't rediscovered until much later.


message 31: by K55f (new)

K55f | 29 comments Wildside, by Steven Gould has a portal to the past and young adults use it to go into the past and dig gold at Sutter's mill thousands of years before man arrives in the new world. That seemed to be a pretty good idea- the problem with going back in time is how do you pay for anything that you would want to bring back? The currency from ancient civilizations would cost as much as the objects that you bring back-if you could find it in large enough sums. Try going to a coin dealer and buying 18th century shillings fo example or even silver certificates for that matter.
Man-made diamonds might be a good idea. Cheap here and rare as diamonds back in time.


message 32: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
I don't know about 50/50. If I'm doing all the work of buying, begging, borrowing, and stealing, I think it would have to be more like 10/90 in my favor.


message 33: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments How 'bout I buy the gas outa my 50?


message 34: by Linda B.D. (last edited May 01, 2013 03:51PM) (new)

Linda B.D. (lindabd) | 85 comments I didn't have to think much about this. I would get as many as I could carry: sets of UN-CIRCULATED CARSON CITY MORGAN DOLLARS. No other mint mark but CC. I do collect these, so I know how much the mint coins are worth ($$$$$$ that's why I don't have any mints).Mints are very rare. This would be extremely valuable. Millions & there value increases with time. I couldn't take any religious things, as I would feel compelled to give them to a museum.


message 35: by chvang (new)

chvang | 14 comments All those lost oral histories and epics. And music that were unrecorded.


message 36: by Bill (new)

Bill Cleary | 66 comments My fantasy has always been to pick up Ben Franklin and drive him around the country to see all the new technology and how the country has changed. Then I'd sell him.


message 37: by John, Moderator in Memory (new)

John | 834 comments Mod
Amy wrote: "So here's my question: If you were to procure a document via time travel, wouldn't any testing determine that is was a fake based on the age of the paper? The only way you could really pass it off ..."

I was thinking the same thing about objects such as guns. If you watch Pawn Stars, they are always looking for old items to show the appropriate wear with no attempt to restore the item. If we are bringing stuff from the past that is new, then it would almost look fake or like a reproduction in the present day. I kind of like Linda's idea because the coins would simply look well preserved and would be graded well for maximum value. A roll of 1909-S VBD Lincoln Pennies in uncirculated condition would bring $50,000 or more today. It would only take 20 rolls to make $1 million.


message 38: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
John wrote: "A roll of 1909-S VBD Lincoln Pennies in uncirculated condition would bring $50,000 or more today. It would only take 20 rolls to make $ 1 million.."

Well someone's done their homework! Guess who I'm taking on my time travel trip.


message 39: by Darin (new)

Darin Dickson | 1 comments I will buy up oil fields post Soviet Union...


message 40: by Jason (new)

Jason (jas_geek45) | 3 comments i`d patent shoes


message 41: by John, Moderator in Memory (new)

John | 834 comments Mod
Amy wrote: "Well someone's done their homework! Guess who I'm taking on my time travel trip. "

Coin collecting is my "other" hobby, and that is one of the few coins I'm missing from my collection of Lincoln pennies because it's impossible to find one in circulation, and to purchase one will set you back about $800. Even rarer is the 1944 steal penny which can fetch up to $110,000.


message 42: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
John wrote: "Even rarer is the 1944 steal penny which can fetch up to $110,000. "

So we just go to 1944 and find 10 steel pennies for everyone in the Time Travel group who wants one and we'll all be millionaires. Anyone in?


message 43: by John, Moderator in Memory (new)

John | 834 comments Mod
Sorry, but it is believed that there were only about two dozen of them minted, at best, and possibly as few as 10.


message 44: by Amy, Queen of Time (new)

Amy | 2208 comments Mod
John wrote: "Sorry, but it is believed that there were only about two dozen of them minted, at best, and possibly as few as 10."

Oh, too bad.


message 45: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Martin (KevinDM) | 24 comments I'm still with you in going back in time...


message 46: by Denise (new)

Denise | 19 comments A few Gutenberg Bibles would bring a tidy sum.


message 47: by Walter (new)

Walter | 1 comments John wrote: "Our featured book for this month's giveaway is The Time Portal by time travel group member Joe Corso and Debra McCarthy. Our question for this month's drawing is this:

"In this book, the hero take..."


I wouldn't bring anything back. Instead I would emerse myself in that time period and with that knowledge write something I learned. Perhaps a book about a famous person I met, or a book about a group of people or their culture. The advantage the time travel person has is the exposure to first hand experiences. This is what I would write about.


message 48: by Howard (new)

Howard Loring (howardloringgoodreadscom) | 1177 comments Walter wrote: 'I wouldn't bring anything back'

Walter, what a paradox.

I think your choice of what to bring back, your impressions, are of the highest value, not to be dismissed.

What you make of them could be also, two for the price of one, as it were.

Double down.


message 49: by NumberLord (new)

NumberLord | 3 comments I'd travel back 50 years and get a position as prop guy for the new Doctor Who series. Then I'd put in things like a sudoku book, a picture of River Song, a cell phone with YouTube showing. (I suppose I'd have to take those things back in time with me.)
Granted, this wouldn't make me rich, but it would freak people out years later. And that's worth much more to me than money.


message 50: by Jessica (new)

Jessica Burstrem | 3 comments The problem with your idea, Walter -- while otherwise admirable -- is that you would have a hard time getting people to believe you without some outside evidence of your credibility.

This is a hard question for me as I would feel very wrong about doing something like that for my own gain. I suppose that I would have to use a significant portion of it to benefit others, and devote my own life to helping others afterward in exchange for whatever additional comfort I would gain for myself and mine in the process. Now to think of something that others haven't -- that's quite a challenge too! No one has mentioned old postage stamps. I will go with those, since I do collect them as well.


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