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The Time Tunnel by Murray Leinster
pub: Pyramid. 143 page paperback. Price: well not
the original price obviously. ISBN: Nope. Too early for one of those
as well. released: 1966 - all right, so I’m
a time traveller!!!
OK,
so why am I including an old book here again? You know how it is.
You hear there’s going to be at least two revivals of ‘The Time Tunnel’
TV series and both sets of producers are looking at the books based
on them.
Oddly enough, both of them are by Murray Leinster. I was just curious
to see how quick I could locate a copy of at least one of them and
picked the semi-novelisation of the original Irwin Allen series.
I found and had this copy in my hand in less than a week from America.
I
have a say ‘semi-novelisation’ because after the introductory chapters
that introduces Project Tic-Toc and Tony Newman bringing a Senator
to the desert stronghold which mirrors the pilot episode, the three
journeys in time aren’t. All the regular cast are there: apart from
Newman, we have the other scientists, Doug Phillips and Ann MacGregor,
and the military presence of General Kirk.
With the Senator threatening to cut off funds to the Project, Newman
uses the Time Tunnel to visit the past. When he has difficulties
getting back, Phillips joins him.
Together they realise that they have to fulfil the past events
before the tunnel can whisk them off somewhere else. Shades of ‘Quantum
Leap’ except this was written 30 years earlier and this particular
condition wasn’t mentioned in the TV series. Leinster also allows
them to carry earring aids and ‘picture tubes’ - we call them video
cameras these days - so the home team can see what is happening
and can advise them.
In a direct comparison to the series, which relied more on the
Tunnel to watch events, this is more a demonstration of Leinster
considering how things would probably be done than under a TV budget.
With his status as a well-known SF writer at the time - not to mention
writing a book two years previous also called ‘Time Tunnel’ - Leinster
probably had enough leverage to write it the way he saw fit.
As the interest in reading this book was to see what had sparked
their interest while planning the re-make, it looks like they might
well stay with Leinster’s time fulfilment doing something that would
otherwise remain unexplained before moving on or returning to the
Project. As noted above, they can even quote the book without being
a ‘Quantum Leap’ clone. It’s no wonder these producers believe they
can do a fresh revival of Project Tic-Toc.
The book itself is part of ‘The Time Tunnel’ history. If you have
an interest in the TV series then this book is worth locating before
prices rise. I found my copy on ABEbooks.com for $4 plus postage.
Prices vary here depending on condition and how much you want to
pay but there’s probably enough for our readership.
You can probably use the same method to get this one, its sequel
or Leinster’s early book. Even for the passage of time, 36 years,
since it’s been written, Leinster is still a good storyteller.
He doesn’t baffle with science and explains sufficiently for the
novice to understand what is going on. Time travel is still very
much ‘out there’ as concepts go and it's only the technology names
that look quaint. Queue music. Turn the egg timer. Watch out for
the sprinkling of sand.
GF Willmetts
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