Bradley's Reviews > Replay
Replay
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As I read this, I had to go through a period of adjustment that included shock, pleasure, annoyance, and eventually acceptance.
It’s by no means a bad book. Indeed, it’s a great book that kept me riveted throughout the reading, and despite... or rather, BECAUSE of the associations I kept making as I read it, I must give this novel many more props than I might have done otherwise.
What the hell am I talking about?
This book won the World Fantasy Award back in the mid eighties, but since then, we’ve had Groundhog Day, Stephen King’s 11/22/63, and The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North.
Those stories are basically retellings of Replay. So many of the events, solutions, even the focus on Kennedy, gambling, and building brand new careers, repeating a whole lifetime over and over, learning and attempting bold crazy schemes, are the same.
Ken Greenwood did it first.
See what my problem is? I LOVED Groundhog Day, 11/22/63, and The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August!!! Hell, I tend to daydream about the basic concept, myself. I LOVE these kinds of stories. Edge of Tomorrow, anyone?
Ken’s book was just as good as the rest. Still fantastic. Well-written. The whole ball of wax. And it’s very emotional. I love it. :)
I’m forced to come to the conclusion that this is GENRE. Details can differ all you like, but the basic idea is definitely an offshoot of the usual time-travel thing, unique to itself.
Definitely a recommendation for all of you fanboys and fangirls out there.
It’s by no means a bad book. Indeed, it’s a great book that kept me riveted throughout the reading, and despite... or rather, BECAUSE of the associations I kept making as I read it, I must give this novel many more props than I might have done otherwise.
What the hell am I talking about?
This book won the World Fantasy Award back in the mid eighties, but since then, we’ve had Groundhog Day, Stephen King’s 11/22/63, and The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North.
Those stories are basically retellings of Replay. So many of the events, solutions, even the focus on Kennedy, gambling, and building brand new careers, repeating a whole lifetime over and over, learning and attempting bold crazy schemes, are the same.
Ken Greenwood did it first.
See what my problem is? I LOVED Groundhog Day, 11/22/63, and The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August!!! Hell, I tend to daydream about the basic concept, myself. I LOVE these kinds of stories. Edge of Tomorrow, anyone?
Ken’s book was just as good as the rest. Still fantastic. Well-written. The whole ball of wax. And it’s very emotional. I love it. :)
I’m forced to come to the conclusion that this is GENRE. Details can differ all you like, but the basic idea is definitely an offshoot of the usual time-travel thing, unique to itself.
Definitely a recommendation for all of you fanboys and fangirls out there.
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Reading Progress
January 17, 2020
–
Started Reading
January 17, 2020
– Shelved
January 18, 2020
– Shelved as:
2020-shelf
January 18, 2020
– Shelved as:
sci-fi
January 18, 2020
– Shelved as:
fantasy
January 18, 2020
–
Finished Reading
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Xavier
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Jan 18, 2020 11:33AM

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I was inspired, after seeing Back to the Future, to indulge in a fantasy - to write down everything I knew about the world 1955-1985 - and to figure out a little about how to bet on that knowledge if put into Marty McFly's shoes and to continue living in 1955
(staying out of trouble with the mob in Vegas was part of that fantasy - as was "betting" "going long" on big companies befroe they got big)
(I suppose betting with London bookmakers would help with that?)
Anyway, when I read Replay, I wondered if Grimwood got some small inspiration from BttF.