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    By Rich in Posts

    Again, sorry for the delay in getting back to the story. I’m really working to push it forward, because I’ve been traveling again the past week or so. The more time that passes before I write the narrative from my notes (right after I realize I’ve been traveling, I write long-hand notes to get the basics down), the more it reads like fiction, and that’s not what I want. It may well all be fiction, but when it sounds like it to me, some of the feeling is gone. It’s just not what I’m trying to communicate.

    I’ve added a bit to Living In the Past, and will get a big portion of the rest of my first trip back done by the end of the week.

    Thanks for reading.

  1. Review: Deja Vu

    May 12, 2007
    By Rich in Posts

    One thing you can count on when spending your entertainment dollars on a movie with Denzel Washington in it, is that things will be tense. Denzel has a knack for picking stories that live on that edge from start to finish without resorting to silliness. Deja Vu, his latest release, just out on video, does flirt with the outskirts of unbelievability, but does offer some interesting angles on Time Travel. Nothing new theoretically, and there’s even a logical problem, but a good, sophisticated look at it.

    Denzel Washington plays an agent of the ATF (Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms) called in to investigate the terrorist bombing of a ferry in New Orleans that killed over 500 men, women and children. When he discovers that the body of a woman, who was thought to be a victim of the bombing, but was actually killed prior to the event, he gets interested in her case. Then, when he realizes that she had left him a voicemail just before dying, he understands that if he finds her killer, he finds the bomber. Denzel’s character is drafted onto an FBI team that’s investigating the bombing with some new technology that seemingly allows them to look 4 days into the past, before the event, to find clues. Little does he know that the technology is even more fantastic than it at first appears.

    Those with an interest in Time Travel will recognize the common theme of trying to change the past and finding that cause and effect don’t always have a linear relationship. This theme is mixed with the multiple/branching timeline theories for a less than profound brew, but the end is a nice example of the theory that the universe may create temporary paradoxes, but ultimately things are set right and life goes on. I enjoyed the optimism of the ending, if not its original thinking. There’s not a LOT of that. Some, but not a lot.

    All in all, if you’re a fan of TT genre, Deja Vu is a good watch.

  2. Snapping Out of It

    May 9, 2007
    By Rich in Posts

    I was all set to get writing again a few days ago, since the furor of my being AWOL is pretty much over, but I had a little episode that almost made me chuck the whole project. I’d just dropped my daughter off at school, and was walking back to my car, thinking of getting back to the computer and looking forward to continuing the story. I rounded a corner, and just as I was pulling the keys out of my pocket, I saw the car parked next to me, a shiny black Hummer with exactly the front grill appendages the one that hit me had. The sight stopped me in my tracks and put one of those feelings in my gut that’s kind of like the biggest, baddest roller coaster you’ve ever ridden.

    Apparently, I hadn’t seen a Hummer up close since the one in Cincinnati plowed into me, and I guess it kind of threw me for a loop.

    That was a week ago tomorrow. Tonight, I pulled myself together, had a beer and worked on "Living In the Past" a little. Onward. Hopefully next time, when a big black Hummer inserts itself into my life, I’ll handle it better!

The Time Traveler's Blog is a work of fiction. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.