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Nomad Of Time Streams [Paperback]


4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

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Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Moorcock's most enjoyable EC volumes. Dec 15 2003
Format:Paperback
This is a book that mixes political commentary with fantastic voyages. Being more of prone to reading sword and sorcery types of novels, I was a bit apprehensive going into this one, but it kept me turning the pages until the end.

Our hero is thrust through a series of alternate realities for how our world might have turned out if certain turns of events were different. There isn't really anything magical or fantastic about these alternate realities, which is what makes it exciting. You feel like things could have been that way.

It was a thoroughly enjoyable departure from dark sorcery and demons of other Eternal Champion novels - not that I don't love those!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Cautionary Socialist Recasting of History Mar 27 2002
Format:Paperback
Michael Moorcock's Nomad of the Timestreams is a political statement of deep profundity wrapped in an imperialist candy-coating of red uniforms, zeppelins, and ripping yarns.

Moorcock's multiverse is never better here. Oswald Bastable, ripped from his home in the Railway Children Series by E. Nesbitt, is part of the British Empire in 1902. Like a Kipling story, he finds himself doing the dirty work of imperialism unthinkingly. He is punished by being sent into an alternate history seventy-odd years in the future. There he tries to reassemble his life, but finds his sense of social justice is too much, and ends up working for anti-imperialist terrorists. The books are rife with real historical figures turned into their ugliest form, and in each racism is the central conflict, and no matter what he does, or what his good intentions are, Bastable always ends up at the forefront of mass destruction namely twice dropping nuclear weapons.

This is a work on the 1970's with its politicals worn bravely on its sleeve, still, Moorcocks vision is soaked with justice and through the adventures in various apocalyptic landscapes, one is as much entertained as educated.

Brilliantly written, well-researched, a dazzling performance equaled only by his Dancers at the End of Time series.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Cautionary Socialist Recasting of History Mar 27 2002
Format:Paperback
Michael Moorcock's Nomad of the Timestreams is a political statement of deep profundity wrapped in an imperialist candy-coating of red uniforms, zeppelins, and ripping yarns.

Moorcock's multiverse is never better here. Oswald Bastable, ripped from his home in the Railway Children Series by E. Nesbitt, is part of the British Empire in 1902. Like a Kipling story, he finds himself doing the dirty work of imperialism unthinkingly. He is punished by being sent into an alternate history seventy-odd years in the future. There he tries to reassemble his life, but finds his sense of social justice is too much, and ends up working for anti-imperialist terrorists. The books are rife with real historical figures turned into their ugliest form, and in each racism is the central conflict, and no matter what he does, or what his good intentions are, Bastable always ends up at the forefront of mass destruction namely twice dropping nuclear weapons.

This is a work on the 1970's with its politicals worn bravely on its sleeve, still, Moorcocks vision is soaked with justice and through the adventures in various apocalyptic landscapes, one is as much entertained as educated.

Brilliantly written, well-researched, a dazzling performance equaled only by his Dancers at the End of Time series.

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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Chilling Commentary
In the context of recent terrorist attacks, this book should be required reading! It is a chilling commentary on the notion of a Pax Britannica or Pax Americana and its hidden... Read more
Published on Oct 3 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars The Steampunk Eternal Champion
I have the Millenium edition of this collection.

Moorcock has brought the Eternal Champion into almost every sub-genre of speculative fiction - sword and sorcery,... Read more

Published on Sep 12 2001 by Chino Fernandez
5.0 out of 5 stars Science Fiction, India, Asia and Victorian Prose? Wow!
A friend of mine loaned me this book and it sat on my shelf for several months. I brought it with me on a trip and eventually picked it up. Once I started I couldn't stop! Read more
Published on Aug 22 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars Another brilliant trailblazer
When this first appeared in the early 70s as an Ace Special it must have hit people as a revelation, because nobody had thought of doing this particular kind of alternate history... Read more
Published on May 3 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars This compilation is excellent.....
Oswald Bastible is an excellent character. This is definitely Moorcock at his best. If you like an adventurous read, read this book.
Published on Mar 3 2001 by Mr. Henry J. Saenz
5.0 out of 5 stars A most fascinating nomad, Oswald Bastable
Moorcock proves himself once again--he is a fine writer with a much-better-than-average grasp of many genres, which mesh well within his book. Read more
Published on Feb 1 2001 by William M. Feagin
4.0 out of 5 stars So many futures that could of been history?
An English officer is tossed into the time streams, ending up in in different worlds, where he must try to decide who he is and what is best for, not only himself, but the world. Read more
Published on Jan 6 2001 by Michael Valdivielso
5.0 out of 5 stars E. Nesbit put to good use
Of all Moorcock's work, this series is the one I most readily enjoy. Elric and the others are all very well, but it's a lot more jarring and thought-provoking (for me, anyway) to... Read more
Published on May 18 2000 by "oscar_freak"
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Moorcock's very best
The three volumes of the Oswald Bastable series are collected here in a somewhat revised form (the final chapters of "The Steel Tsar" have been completely rewritten and... Read more
Published on Jan 13 1999 by Marc Szeftel
5.0 out of 5 stars Recommended
"A Nomad of the Time Streams" is a unique and fun read, somewhere between Rudyard Kipling and H.G Wells. Read more
Published on Mar 25 1998
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