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Downtime

DowntimeAuthor: Tamara Allen
Creator: Lorraine Brevig
Publisher: Hunna Bunna Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $12.00
as of 9/8/2010 03:17 CDT details



Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars reviews

Media: Paperback
Pages: 504
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.9 x 1.5

ISBN: 0615301053
EAN: 9780615301051
ASIN: 0615301053

Publication Date: February 1, 2010
Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 2 days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
On assignment in London, FBI Agent Morgan Nash finds himself moments away from a bullet through the heart when the case he's working goes awry. But fate has other plans, he discovers when he wakes in a world far removed from his own. At work cataloguing ancient manuscripts in the British Museum, Ezra Glacenbie inadvertently creates the magic that pulls Morgan out of the twenty-first century and into the nineteenth. It's an impromptu vacation which may become permanent when the spellbook goes missing. Further upsetting Morgan's search for a way home is the irresistible temptation to investigate the most notorious crime of the nineteenth century. But it's the unexpected romance blossoming between Morgan and Ezra that becomes the most dangerous complication of all.


Customer Reviews:



5 out of 5 stars Unexpected Pleasure   August 2, 2010
Sandra L. Powers
I picked this book up because it was cheap and because the time travel aspect intrigued me. Okay, and I was interested in how being gay might play out in the 1880s. But I tend to read action-oriented urban fantasy and I'm not usually big on romance, so I didn't expect much.

But ... by the end of the book I was bawling my eyes out. The mystery was a bit pat but that's not the draw here. The characters, even the minor ones, were well-developed and three-dimensional. And the romance ... *sigh* Beautiful.

I recommend this book even for readers who don't normally dip into romance. It may not be your standard fare -- it's not mine -- but it was truly an unexpected pleasure.



4 out of 5 stars Deeply endearing despite being a wee bit far-fetched   August 2, 2010
D. Stein (New York, NY United States)
I rolled my eyes a bit in the beginning, but despite myself I started to enjoy the characters. I even really hoped for the romance to blossom and last forever. Downtime is a good read, just check your eye rolls at the door and let it unfold.


5 out of 5 stars Surprisingly Good Read   July 13, 2010
E. Hart (Midwest)
Although I greatly enjoyed another work by this author, Whitstling In the Dark, I wasn't sure that I would be willing to suspend my disbelief with a plot centered on a peculiar blend of time travel and the supernatural. I needn't have worried, as the author has a skillful hand with character, dialog and action. She excells at creating period atmosphere, so much that the scent of sooty coal smoke and stuffy Victorian parlors will linger in your mind long after you've turned the last page of this novel. The protagonist was likable and just enough of a rascal to keep him interesting. I have a weakness for a good romance, and found myself totally involved with that level of the story. Add a strong supporting cast and Jack the Ripper and you have a highly original and suprisingly good read.


4 out of 5 stars Delightful Read   February 25, 2010
Kassa
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Downtime is actually the first novel of author Allen and a re-released title. The theme of space travel is an interesting premise and the actual plot is pretty ambitious. The time travel is a classic element in literature but well portrayed here with some great characters that create a wide spectrum of responses. The storyline is slightly too ambitious with a few confusing elements and the mystery is distracting and too easily solved. However the book really shines in the personal interactions of the cast and delivers a solid, well written, engaging story.

FBI Agent Morgan Nash is working a case in dreary London and comes close to death when the man he's following shoots him. At the moment he's shot, Nash seems to be transported from his world into the past. London, 1888 to be exact. There three friends unintentionally summoned Nash, although they really thought they were summoning a demon. A demon may have been easier to deal with as the abrasive, arrogant Nash turns the lives of all three men upside down as they scramble to find a way to send him back. Yet when Nash becomes friends with these men, and perhaps more than friends with Ezra, the situation becomes even more complicated.

The story starts out somewhat confusing. There are a lot of random names thrown in with very little detail and explanation. There are agents, bosses, lovers, bad guys, and good guys all offered blithely with almost no clarification on which is which. This leads directly into the time travel aspect, causing some more confusion. However once the story is firmly in the nineteenth century, these confusing elements and random names are dropped to focus on the main characters of the story. Here the plot starts to really take off with the wealth of detail surrounding the setting and the focus on the men and their interactions. The story is at its strongest when focusing on the characters. The time travel aspect is delightful and well written with a lot of humor and charm. The view of London at the time is seen through the eyes of Nash, thus offering the reader a glimpse at how we might see the past ourselves.

Although the book follows the numerous characters, the novelty of having a time traveler from the future in the past, and all the various difficulties and humorous situations that occur there is the additional murder subplot that Nash can't resist getting involved in. Here the FBI agent decides to solve one of the greatest mysteries of time with the Jack the Ripper murders. Without all the fancy technology of the future, Nash manages to solve this murder by sheer luck, coincidence, and a lot of too easy manipulations. This entire subplot is distracting and totally unnecessary. I wish the story had included an anonymous murder instead of one so famous as the culprit is slightly ridiculous in my opinion and the fact that Nash solves this case through sheer coincidence and story manipulation made this a frustrating element. Additionally Nash is constantly worried about changing the future through incredibly minor details, yet thinks nothing of solving an incredibly high profile murder case that has kept historians fascinated for centuries. Although there is an explanation offered for this, the dichotomy is too much for me to excuse easily unfortunately. Additionally there are a few details and comments regarding the Ripper's identity and the cover up that don't match the story as presented.

When the story focuses on the characters, the plot really zips along and has the most entertainment. Here the characterization is wonderful with the smart, sensitive, and charming Ezra. Ezra can see and hear ghosts, which cause quite a bit of derision from Nash initially yet Ezra's unending patience, gentle personality, and incredible mental and emotional strength make him a great character. He uniquely understands Nash and offers a passionate romance mixed with strong force of will. Ezra doesn't use his will in the same way Nash does, it's much more subtle and fitting to his time but Ezra is far from weak. He contrasts beautifully with the arrogant, condescending whirlwind that Nash presents at the beginning. Nash matures from an ass to someone with more maturity, intelligence, and understanding. He initially turns Ezra's life upside down with very few cares or thoughts to the destruction he causes since it's all about Nash being right. Once he comes to recognize the difficulties of the time period combined with the personalities of the men, Nash is more sympathetic and understanding. He becomes a likable character, although not totally changed. Together the two have a heated chemistry and entertaining dialogue.

There is also a host of great characters in Ezra's best friend, Derry. The widowed Irishman offers a charming buffer between the friends and you can practically see the mischievous sparkle in his eye. There is the prissy Henry that struggles with his past and the uptight Kath that tries to keep all the bachelors in line. Brief cameos of other characters compliment a large cast that never overwhelms the story but seems fitting. These characters all accept Ezra and Nash's homosexuality, and relationship, a little too easily but there are enough elements included in the book that addressing this would have complicated and distracted the main focus on the story.

The writing is strong and clean with good prose, witty dialogue, and three dimensional characters. The details shine in both subtle and more overt ways. I wish the story had focused more on finding the missing spell book, a thread that is virtually ignored sadly, instead of the celebrated mystery. Without the added detail of being a famous murder, following Nash and an unwilling Ezra solve the case is interesting and entertaining. If this had been an anonymous murder, it would have fit easier without distraction or the weak explanation about its affect on the future. There are a few details that didn't add up to the characters and their situations - such as Ezra not working for 2 full weeks with little to no repercussions - but overall these details are not enough to distract from a solid telling. While I enjoyed Whistling in the Dark more, Downtime is a good story that Allen fans can enjoy until the next book. Pick it up now and indulge in a classic time travel story, with a few twists, that is sure to please.



4 out of 5 stars A pleasure and a treasure   February 11, 2010
Ann Somerville (Australia)
10 out of 11 found this review helpful

Time travel stories hinge on the fish out of water theme, or the `what would happen if I shot my own grandfather?' paradox. Downtime, a really rather charming romance, is mostly about the former, with a bit of the latter. This 300+ page novel was a delight in many ways. The Victorian details were handled very well, and deftly so one never felt it was a history lesson (only a couple of goofs revealed that the writer was not English.) The editing and format was perfectly clean , and the quality of writing was itself superior. And the actual plot was not terribly cliched, in a rather cliched genre, with warm and credible characters who linger in the mind long afterwards.

I have very few criticisms. The plot got somewhat tangled, with Morgan's present day crime fighting confusing in detail, and resolved rather quickly - if it had been dispensed with entirely, it would have been no loss. The interweaving of the Jack the Ripper story with the characters' lives was a tad strained and leads to some slow pacing, but on the whole worked well enough. There were a couple of bum notes in the otherwise well-sustained Victorian era setting, and I also thought the acceptance of Morgan and Ezra's relationship among Ezra's circle was a tiny bit too easy, but not to the point of breaking the suspension of disbelief. The social consequences of being homosexual at that time are certainly not skirted over, but nor are they belaboured. I thought that side of it well handled indeed.

These really weren't enough to tarnish my enjoyment of this story which I inhaled more or less in one sitting. Morgan is the least likable of the characters, which is not to say he's not likable at *all* - but being a brash and rather pigheaded American, he sometimes made me want to slap him. But he's just what Ezra and the others needed to shake up their confined existence, and he and Ezra make a lovely, believable couple. Some of his detective antics are a bit too Hollywood for true credibility but they're used well and keep things rolling along nicely.

Ezra is a darling - psychic, queer, tortured, honourable, and trying so hard to fit in with a society and class completely unforgiving of someone so far outside social norm. I loved how Allen resisted taking the easy course between him and Morgan, and it's a good way into the story before anyone makes a move, having to get past misunderstanding, prejudice and social restrictions before they can admit the attraction between them. It feels right to delay, and for there to be no easy path to their relationship either.

The minor characters are also attractive and well-drawn, from Derry, the Irishman (with a regrettably wandering dialect) to Hannah, the beaten-down maid who blossoms under Morgan's modern approach to women and servants. The little household of bachelors, and the wider circle of men of ambiguous sexuality and class fascinated me, as did the set pieces in drawing rooms and opera houses. Real history and fiction are nicely woven together, to make a vivid and enjoyable setting for the romance.

The ending surprised me, though there are really only a few ways a story like this can finish, and I found myself thinking about Ezra and Morgan for days afterwards - always, to me, a sign of good writing. It's not the most perfect novel I've ever read - time travel stories bring many pitfalls and I know of none that avoid them all - but I still thoroughly enjoyed Downtime, and would happily reread it. Recommended, and I'll be looking out for more by this author. One to watch out for.




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