Rivers of Time

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Rivers of Time
LC Class
MLC R CP01173

Rivers of Time is a 1993 collection of

. The remaining story was first published in the present work.

The book collects the author's nine tales[2] of time-traveling hunter Reginald Rivers, the hero of his 1956 classic, "A Gun for Dinosaur". He wrote another Rivers story in 1990 to fulfil a request by Robert Silverberg for a dinosaur story for his 1992 anthology The Ultimate Dinosaur; afterwards, de Camp added to the sequence until he had enough stories for a book.

In 2012,

Audible Studios released an unabridged audio-book recording of Rivers of Time narrated by James Adams.[3]

Contents

The series

The Rivers stories take the form of first-person narratives by the protagonist told to companions whose identities vary, but who have in common the fact that their contributions to the conversation are omitted, and must be inferred from those of Rivers. Every story is an anecdote from Rivers' career as a conductor of time safaris to previous eras, both to hunt prehistoric creatures and for scientific purposes (and, occasionally, anti-scientific purposes). In addition to Rivers, the main recurring characters include fellow members of his safari firm, including his partner Chandra Aiyar, camp boss Beauregard Black, and cook Ming. In most instances, the actions of their human clients prove more troublesome than those of the extinct fauna, a theme set in "Faunas", a 1968 poem by de Camp that precedes the stories. An afterword by the author tells how he came to write the series.

Rules of time travel

  1. The effective range of the stories' time machine is from about one hundred thousand years to about one billion years in the past, with periods more recent or earlier beyond its ability to reach.
  2. The further back in time the machine travels the less accurate it is; beyond the Triassic, it may arrive days or even months off schedule.
  3. The amount of time the machine spends in another era appears to equal in length to the amount of time that elapses in the present, in its absence.
  4. The timestream does not appear to allow paradox, defined as anything that might significantly alter events subsequent to the period visited. For instance, a person cannot travel to the same time twice. Attempting to do results in one being thrown back to the present, "torn to shreds in the process." The same would presumably result from attempting to interact with early humans. Therefore, the time machine is restricted from visiting the period of protohuman development, and refrains from visiting any time within one thousand years of a previous visit.

Species featured

Prehistoric species of various eras featured in the series include Agriochoerus, Alamosaurus, Archaeotherium,

Brontops
, Camptosaurus, Columbian mammoth, Coryphodon, Deinosuchus, Diprotodon, Eurypterid,
Diatryma
), Gorgosaurus, Hoplophoneus, Hyaenodon, Ichthyostega, Mastodon, Megalania, Merycoidodon, Metamynodon, Metoposaurus, Mylodon, Ornithomimus, Parasaurolophus, Phenacodus, Placerias, Postosuchus, Procoptodon, Rutiodon, Saurophaganax or Allosaurus (referred to as Epanterias), Stegosaurus, Teratosaurus, Triceratops,
Troodon formosus (presented as Stenonychosaurus
, and supposedly a type of pachycephalosaur), and Tyrannosaurus trionychus.

Tyrannosaurs of the genus

Castoroides ohioensis and the American lion
.

Obsolete science

While Rivers of Time is a well researched time travel series, paleontological knowledge has improved since the stories were written, rendering some aspects of its portrait of the prehistoric past obsolete. Dated material includes the following:

Sequel

A tenth story of Reginald Rivers, "Gun, Not for Dinosaur", authored by

Boer bodyguards attempt to prevent the evolution of Negroes
by going back in time in Africa to kill their prehistoric ancestors.

Reception

Janice M. Eisen, reviewing the work in Aboriginal Science Fiction, calls de Camp "one of the great old pros of the SF field. When reading him, you're always guaranteed a good time, and sometimes more." She gives the collection a three star rating, deeming it "lightweight, amusing work ... very well done candy, with a little paleontological education thrown in," and "particularly sharp shots at fundamentalists and animal-rights activists." But the stories, she feels, "are very old-fashioned;" often "merely vignettes, with action but little plot, and they all follow the same formulaic structure." She finds the characters "drawn with broad strokes on high-quality cardboard, [with] motivations ... at best shadowy. " She notes, however, that "de Camp's sense of humor never fails, and the tales are often witty." She judges them "best, and funniest, if they're not all read at one sitting."[4]

The collection was also reviewed by Gary K. Wolfe in Locus no. 95, Dec. 1993, and Don D'Ammassa in Science Fiction Chronicle no. 169, Jan. 1994.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Rivers of Time title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  2. ^ a b Reginald Rivers series listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  3. ^ Rivers of Time audiobook read by James Adams
  4. ^ Eisen, Janet. Review in Aboriginal Science Fiction v. 7, no. 4, Spring 1994, pages 53-54.