Jacobs and Birnbach’s YA time-traveling adventure combines SF and elements of classic caper and heist stories.
Tori is a normal teenager thrust into the middle of her parents’ ongoing divorce. Adding to the trauma, it just so happens to be the dawn of the Covid-19 pandemic, too. As Tori’s entire routine is upended by the divorce and the outbreak, she is forced to ride the crisis out in both New York City and the Boston area (where she’ll be moving with her mother), two places in near-lockdown. While packing her things for the big move, Tori answers a phone call from a New York Times reporter—the strangely named “Tobias Guildersleeve”—looking for Tori’s father. Eavesdropping, she soon discovers a family secret: Her grandfather, a once-successful jeweler named Victor Gold, was caught stealing one of the world’s most precious gems, the “Desert Sun.” He served time for the heist, and the resulting fallout tore her father’s family asunder. Shortly after the call from the reporter, Tori mysteriously awakens in her own room, but not in her own time. She’s been taken all the way back to March 1980, where she meets a teen named Bobby. As if this weren’t trippy enough, she knows this Bobby—it’s her father as an adolescent. In order to save her father’s future (and therefore her own), she must work with him, facing the peril of highly dangerous criminals to recover the Desert Sun and set things right for her family. Fans of classic time-travel narratives will find much to love here. Though the concept of going back into the past to meet younger versions of family members has been done, Jacobs and Birnbach’s characters are distinctive enough to keep this work feeling fresh. Tori’s unique humor—she refers to summer camp as “New York with mosquitoes”—and the author’s smooth prose make this solid, lighter SF yarn a delight.
A classic SF trope, well rendered.