Forty, Counting Down & Twenty-One, Counting Up Audiobook By Harry Turtledove cover art

Forty, Counting Down & Twenty-One, Counting Up

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Forty, Counting Down & Twenty-One, Counting Up

By: Harry Turtledove
Narrated by: Victor Bevine
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Harry Turtledove, the master of alternate history, turns to time travel in these two related novellas that range from fantastic to oddly familiar to eerily prescient.

In the Hugo Award nominee Forty, Counting Down, computer genius Justin Kloster travels to the past to stop himself from making a terrible mistake. But all actions have their consequences.

Then, in Twenty-One, Counting Up, Kloster's college life and romantic dreams are rudely interrupted when the 40-year-old Justin arrives from the future to save him from himself.

©1999 Harry Turtledove (P)2008 Audible, Inc.
Science Fiction Alternate History Fiction Genre Fiction Short Story Anthologies & Short Stories Literary Fiction Adventure Historical Fantasy
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This is the second time I've listened to this book; it is that fun. Usually, if I listen to a book more than once, there have been many years in-between, but I only bought this book last year!😊 I love the two stories, the opposite sides of one guy, one version of him in his 40s and one in his 20s. Yes, the stories tell the same tale...but only sorta. There are subtle differences, and it is the subtleties that make this tale, I think. Some people, I know, didn't like this because they thought it was the same story told twice. I think that perhaps they didn't listen closely enough to hear yes, the sameness, but more importantly, these artful differences. These are what made me smile, hearing how something that might seem bad in one moment isn't necessarily so in the long run. A good lesson for us all. If only we all had a future self who comes back to "help".☺️

This is so fun!

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I like the conversational aspect of the audio. It sounded like a storyteller recounting his youth or adventure

Have my brain a workout following the two characters and imagining their experiences and strategies

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Two related novellas that tell the same exact story from two different points view. The differing points of view of the same character at two different ages. They meet when the older version travels back in time to try to retroactively save his marriage. Short and to the point, Harry Turtledove, the master of alternative history, easily masters a tale of an alternative future, on the small canvas of the future of a single person.

It would be easy to say that there is only one character, Justin (there are also his two romantic interests, but they have small roles -- enough to impact Justin, but not enough to impact us readers). What makes the book fascinating is the differing characters of Justin at age 40 and 21, especially when they interact with each other. At first, you want to root for older Justin, intent on saving his marriage. But in an interesting twist, you discover that young Justin is also a sympathetic character.

The fulcrum on which most time travel fiction rests is the consistency of its internal logic -- how changing of the past affects the future. In the most satisfying versions, like The Terminator, changing the past forces the future to become what it was always supposed to become. Often, when the changing of the past creates unforeseen consequences for the future, consistency is the casualty, and the result is unsatisfactory, especially when the consequences are too broad. Turtledove bypasses this problem by making the story personal to Justin, changing his future, but not blowing that up to anything bigger. In the end, it is quite satisfying, both for Justin and for the reader.

Justin Time

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An aptly named title.. 2 short stories that are interlinked, yet can be approached on their own.

Both stories run over the "same" timeframe - but from two different perspectives.

The 1st story is about a man's journey at 41 years old, to help himself 20 years ago through time travel... the 2nd about his life as of 21 year old being approached from a man who claims to be himself, but from the future.

Part of yourself is extrapolating very "cliched" variants for the ending - but the twist is familiar yet surprising... won't spoil it, but do be patient.

Recommended..

Only 4 stars - because it would have been interesting from Megan's perspective!



Familiar yet a nice twist

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"Forty counting down" was an entertaining and thought provoking story. But after reading it, I wasn't sure I wanted to hear the same story from the younger protagonist's point of view in "20 counting up"--the first story already explained what would happen to him.

Enjoyable, don't know if I need both viewpoints

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