Henry Vickers leads an expedition of big game hunters back into time in order to hunt dinosaurs. This description may be from another edition of this product.
Does changes in the past change the future or has it already happened.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
A look at if the past can be changed by traveling to the past or has it already happened and we are living it now. Also a good look at how we are powerless over people, places and things; just our own actions, attitudes, and thoughts...T.
Excellent outdoors adventure stories before Jurassic Park
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
Time Safari was originally a short story, and was then published as a novel under the same name by including two additional stories: Calibration Run and Boundary Layer. It was published again as Tyrannosaur, with Calibration Run replaced by another story called Tyrannosaur. These stories trace the central character Henry Vickers through his involvement with time travel (through a mechanism invented in Israel). Vicker's is the modern day white hunter born a hundred years too late and he is unable to make a living in the modern world, even failing in marriage. Vickers finds that being a safari guide is the thing he is cut out to be and he can accept the rugged in-the-wilds life. He marries a client who also shares an interest in outdoors and hunting, and they form a team together. People who are interested in pre-history, hunting and outdoors adventure will like this one. Calibration run is set in the age of saber-tooths and pre-human hominids, but is still a good! tie-in. The dinosaurs in the other stories are fast, and alive, not clunking grunting lizards. I read this before Jurassic Park ever came out and was wanting someone to make a good dinosaur movie as a result. Jurassic Park's velociraptors were straight out of Time Safari, except that David Drake's characters aren't clueless preppy sub-urbanites when they meet. David Drake is a visual writer, concentrating on what is going on rather than dissecting the characters in self-centered introspection. He includes a number of technical details to add grit, yet he doesn't (for example) make up some hokey theory of time travel mechanics and try to expound on it, boring the reader with pages of fake quantum mechanics like some writers are guilty of. He is the type of writer who admits to an interest in dinosaurs since he was a boy, and who also admits that his version of the dinosaur will one day be outdated. And he concentrates on people; his stories expound on human interaction, an! d while they feature disasters they aren't horror stories. Similar to this book is Arthur Conan Doyle's Lost World novel (the original, not Michael Chrichton's version) which is dated and illogical, but interesting, and L. Sprague de Camp's Rivers of Time stories.
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