![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Like Groundhog Day but for years not just replaying a day. " very interesting book about reliving your life over and over again " - Tom, Overall Performance: Narration Rating: Story Rating:. ![]() The book extends beyond the genre and is actually an surprisingly deep and interesting look at life in general - the choices we make throughout our lives, and the consequences and trade-offs that result from them." "While it's commonly classified as science fiction, Replay's only tie to the science fiction genre is the time loop that the main character is caught up in. Winner of the 1988 World Fantasy Award for best novel and published in eleven languages, Replay unravels the answers in a masterful skein that captivates our imagination. The one thing he doesn't know is: Why has he been chosen to replay his life? And how many times must he win-and lose-everything he loves? He knows who will win every World Series.every Kentucky Derby.even how to win on Wall Street. It's all the same.but different: Jeff knows what the future holds. Trapped in a tepid marriage and a dead-end job, he dies in 1988 and wakes up to find himself in 1963, at the age of eighteen, staring at his dorm room walls at Emory University. A time-travel classic in the tradition of Jack Finney's Time and Again, Ken Grimwood's acclaimed novel Replay asks the provocative question: "What if you could live your life over again, knowing the mistakes you'd made before?"įorty-three-year-old Jeff Winston gets several chances to do just that. ![]()
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