There was enough technical explanation to nod along and say "Yeah, sure, okay." without getting bogged down in mathematics and physics. Honestly, it's best not to think too much about the science, because I feel like it's at that level where if you start picking holes in it you'll only ruin the story for yourself. The setting feels very contemporary, with references to recent events like lockdowns, but with one significant scientific breakthrough we don't have, a machine that sends people on a one-way-trip to the distant past, a jump that splits off a splinter universe. Lost in Time is a really fascinating mystery crime thriller wrapped up in a time-travel science fiction novel, and it makes for a really interesting combination. But which ones are connected to the murder that exiled her father? That mystery stretches across the past, present, and future–and leads to a revelation that will change everything. As she peels back the layers of the mystery that ripped her father from this world, Adeline finds more questions than answers. And that she is made of tougher stuff that she ever imagined. She soon learns that impossible tasks are her specialty. People around her insist that both are impossible tasks. She sets out on a quest to prove him innocent. Adeline Anderson has already lost her mother to a deadly and unfair disease.
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