Time's Eye is the first novel in A Time Odyssey series. In the North-west Frontier between Pakistan and Afghanistan, four groups find themselves separated from their own times. Moreover, silvery globes fixed in mid air are scattered throughout the landscape, apparently observing local activity.
In this novel, a UN surveillance helicopter in 2037 is fired upon by a Pastun adolescent, damaging the tail rotor. The pilot, Casey Othic, breaks his leg in the emergency landing, but the co-pilot, Abdikadir Omar, and the observer, Biseasa Dutt, are not injured. All the fluttering and smoke attract the attention of nearby soldiers, who think the contraption is a Russian machine.
The soldiers are Tommies and sepoy troops from Jamrud, a fort in the English Raj of 1885. Included among them are two correspondents, the Anglo-Indian Ruddy and the American Josh White. They surround the smoking machine and order the occupants to surrender their weapons and exit the device. They have to help extricate Casey from the distorted frame.
A British patrol also finds a pair of "man-apes" wandering the plains. The mother and child look very much like chimpanzees, but they have longer legs and a truly upright posture. The helicopter crew decide that they are australopithecines from at least two million years in the past.
In low earth orbit, a Soyuz re-entry vehicle from 2037 is lost in time after launching from the International Space Station on a routine crew rotation. Musa, Kolya and Sable use their instruments to scan the planet, but can find only a few locations with signs of large populations. The capsule communications gear cannot detect any radio sources, but Sable uses a discarded amateur rig to locate two sources, one of which is the UN helicopter radio.
In this story, the UN personnel share information with the Soyuz crew and determine that they are stranded in the thirteenth century. The British capture some scouts from an army translocated from 326 BC and send Biseasa and Abdikadir with some of the Raj troopers to make contact. The Soyuz crew land and find themselves among a Mongolian empire.
This story is a well crafted tale of time dysfunctions and mixed histories, much like Dickson's Time Storm, but with a static timescape. It is also much like Stirling's Island in Time novels or Flint's Grantville series on a grander scale. However, it adds the omnipresent silvery spheres, which Biseasa senses are observation devices. She has gained an impression of a very old species, maybe from the earliest formed stars, which she names the Firstborn. Apparently these aliens have caused the time dysfunctions or, at least, are busily observing the phenomenon.
Despite the hype, this novel does not present any new notions. Unlike Clarke's The Other Side of the Sky, it does not set a new standard for SF works. The only high-tech idea is the use of superstring theory to (vaguely) explain the time dysfunctions.
The story does have a lot of name dropping, from Rudyard Kipling to Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great, and even more use of famous locales. The Kipling inclusion is probably a tribute to a fellow SF writer, but the other contrived coincidences are rather tacky. Nonetheless, the story is well written and entertaining, the best joint work produced by these authors to date.
Recommended for Clarke and Baxter fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of alternate history and castaways in time.
-Arthur W. Jordin