A Time Traveler's History of Tomorrow

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81uwCdC27eL
Publisher
Age Range
14+
Release Date
November 04, 2025
ISBN
978-0823458295
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A time-bending love story between a prickly young woman and a carefree stranger, who are tasked with saving the universe—after accidentally destroying it in the first place.

Genevieve Newhouse and Ash Hargreaves weren’t supposed to meet like this. Unless it was always meant to be . . .

Gen is a fastidious science prodigy with a chip on her shoulder, and she can turn herself invisible.

Happy-go-lucky Ash has just escaped a sheltered (read: cultish) childhood, and he can manipulate time.

The gifted eighteen-year-olds cross paths at the 1934 Chicago World’s Fair, where Genevieve’s experimental physics project causes an apocalyptic explosion. Ash tries to avert catastrophe by gallantly rewinding time a few minutes, but instead, he transports them back to 1893. The duo finds themselves trapped in an unfamiliar, unwelcoming era, with no idea how to return to their own time—or if their own time even exists. Their cataclysmic leap across decades might have destroyed the world as they know it . . .

Fate and free will intertwine in this page turning historical romance that sets two irresistible strangers down a chaotic, potentially apocalyptic path. “Will they or won’t they” takes on a whole new meaning as Gen and Ash fight for survival while falling in love.

Hand to fans of Immortal Longings and Anatomy: A Love Story, and don’t miss companion novels Murder for the Modern Girl and A Starlet’s Secret to a Sensational Afterlife.

Editor review

1 review
Glittering Historical promoting Science, Equality, and Progress
(Updated: June 15, 2026)
Overall rating
 
4.7
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
I, too, would like a coat with pockets large enough to hold several hefty books.

This time-traveling romp is an ode to science girls, the brilliant minds held back by prejudice, and the small pebbles that start avalanches. It’s 1934. Genevieve is bursting to share her latest scientific discoveries (never mind that the foundation thinks she’s a boy - they won’t have time to change their mind on the spot); Ash is headed for the same event, not sure what he’s looking for other than that something in the World Fair is going to bring the end of the world. When things go wrong and Ash’s time travel ability takes them to the year 1893, it’s up the disgruntled duo to return to the future and prevent the apocalypse which they may have unintentionally wrought.

Genevieve and Ash jump off the page. They're both funny and smart, and like to show it, and their different upbringings bring humor and tensions. While their mystical abilities aren’t fully explained, they clearly stem from key moments in their lives and continue to shape and be shaped by their identities. These connections are slowly revealed as the two get to know each other, and confront truths about themselves, and the underlying emotion is deeply relatable (the fear of being seen, for example, or not being seen by those one loves). There’s also a cultish commune, dire predictions, and skulking in labs and libraries. Genevieve is a budding physicist, so there’s a fair amount of science babble that may or may not be as far-fetched as her invisibility power, but as a non-physicist myself, I’m happy to accept it for the story. Is it actually feasible to build a cyclotron in the backyard greenhouse and discover a new element? Debatable, but if anyone can, it’s Genevieve.

Apart from the jump back to 1893, the time travel is largely limited to minute/hour changes. Rewinding a conversation, etc. So while there is an inevitable discussion of time loops and paradox, it’s not a narrative focus, and I slide it into the same category as the science babble - might trip up hardcore sci-fi fans or PhDs, but it works for me.

This book is the latest in a set of companion novels that take place in the same world and feature Genevieve’s sisters. Although Time Traveler is at the end chronologically, I read it without the others and both enjoyed it as a standalone and am now looking forward to picking up the others.
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