A historical fantasy novel in which a Revolutionary War–era British soldier is thrown into a time-traveling adventure.
As Modlin’s latest novel opens in April 1775, British Army Sgt. Noland Black is rallying his troops to march on Lexington and Concord in the Colony of Massachusetts in order to seize rebel stores of guns and ammunition. On the return trip to Boston, rebels swarm out of the woods, and Black is wounded and loses consciousness. When he awakens, he’s still on the ground in Concord, but 200 years have passed, and it’s historical reenactors who are trying to give him first aid. Suddenly, Noland has to deal with the unfamiliar world of 1975, including cars, modern medicine, 20th-century modes of dress. He's aggressive and depressed at first (“I should not be here,” he thinks at one point. “I know of nothing I see”), while the history buffs who found him facedown and wounded set about investigating the amazing truth of his situation. Before long, his new friends show him more of the Boston environs, including a tour of Cambridge, all of which is a somber experience for Noland, who only wants to return home: “The place from where I came, and knew quite well, no longer exists.” Over the course of this novel, Modlin tightly orchestrates a familiar time-shift story, and his decision to make his protagonist gruff and irascible rather than wide-eyed gives the work a refreshing narrative focus: Noland is shown to be a tough veteran of many skirmishes but a good man at heart, even before the shots that sent him through time. The text itself has occasional, distracting slip-ups that might have been caught with a stronger edit (such as “Identifying the shears as a weapon and instrument that could destroy his regiment coat, Sergeant Black reached swung out his good arm”). However, readers will still find the story to be a strong one that provides rock-solid entertainment.
A fun and often intriguing tale of a military man unstuck in time.