Today's mainstream entertainment industry needs you. Please support the commercial fiction market by ordering a copy of this easy-to-read page-turner today, and then rest assured, for you will be getting a fresh, new, fascinating, fast-paced action-adventure in time travel that has straightforward themes. This here popcorn thriller not only explores the ins and outs of being able to "reel in" your future selves, but it also blends science fiction with fantasy - seeing as how the high-tech time machines combined the interdimensional with the magical.
The main protagonist is relatable yet nuanced, and surely, the focus on her character can appeal to the broad general public. Join in on the exciting mission as the protagonists dig for logical and philosophical solutions to mind-bending problems.
It is a helluva thing foreseeing yourself die tomorrow, being able to prevent your untimely death, and still dying unwillingly at that moment anyway. Forty years old and lonely in a cabin by a lake, Hazel's sole chance at busting the paradox - to save the baby boomer - came the following day: on Easter Sunday. She accelerated forward in time to get some help, but consequently, messing with the future can make bad dreams come true. Luckily, one's clones from the future also prove how: when you are sick of yourself, being there for your self is the best medicine.
If you can relate to somebody who feels shut out from happiness in "the big city", then this "holiday read" is what your doctor ought to order. Along with many otherworldly dangers, Miss Hazel Soffy had to face the character of the dark triad too, or in other words: the narcissist, the psycho, and the Machiavellian person - all wrapped up into one. Her antagonists also had the audacity to be insolent, willfully ignorant, obtusely resentful, and contemptuous - they were bullies. Now, do we let the corrupted get away with taking advantage of us all, or has the due time come to stand united against everyone's bullies?