1.15.2015 | Thursday

All The Butterflies in the World

category: Book Reviews
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All The Butterflies in the Worldtitle: All The Butterflies in the World
author: Rodney Jones
series: The Sun the Moon and Maybe the Trains #2
published: 28 October 2014
publisher: Red Adept Publishing
genre(s): romance, time travel
pages: 300
source: book tour, publisher
format: eBook
buy/shelve it: Amazon | B&N | BookBub | Goodreads

rating: four-stars | series rating: four-stars

the blurb

With her senior year looming, Tess McKinnon has two goals: hanging out with her best friend, Liz, and avoiding her judgmental, alcoholic mother. Then yummy John Bartley arrives—to tell Mrs. McKinnon that her daughter is dead. Distinctly still alive, Tess is baffled by John’s tales of 1800s time travel, rewritten lives, and love. She knows she’s never seen him before, but her feelings refuse to be denied.

When Tess and John discover an aged newspaper clipping that indicates John’s uncle was hanged for Tess’s murder in 1875, John decides to return to his time to save his uncle’s life, but when Tess checks the article after John’s departure, she is horrified to discover that John has been hanged instead.

Armed with determination and modern ingenuity, Tess must abandon her past and risk her future for a chance to catch her own killer and find her first love for the second time.


my review

All The Butterflies in the World picked up right at the same moment as the previous book ended.  John and Tess are face to face and it is clear that the Butterfly Effect is in play.  While I am fascinated with that theory, it almost made me a little sad to know that the moments I loved the most between them from the first book were gone for Tess.

Unlike the first novel, the chapters switched back and forth between the viewpoints of Tess and John.  I liked that especially in this book because, for much of the book, the two were living separate lives.  Tess is still in 2009 after John has gone back to his own time in an attempt to set things right, promising to return to her.  This is when the issues of changing things in the past really come to light.  Every time either of them goes back and changes something, the future changes, often in some surprising ways.  Finally, Tess realizes that her only chance to save John and to be with him is to go back in the past and stay there.  And even though she has to leave everything and everyone behind, she finds an interesting way to keep in touch.  And that leads to yet another twist and I loved it!

I loved this story, but I was left with one single question.  This could be a minor spoiler, so  be warned!  View Spoiler »

This was a fantastic book that really made you think about the theoretical considerations of time travel and how it affects history and the future.

About Rodney Jones

While a past resident of Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Florida, New York, and Vermont, Rodney now resides in Richmond, Indiana, where he whiles away his days pecking at a laptop, riding his ten-speed up the Cardinal Greenway, taking long walks with his daughter, or backpacking and wilderness camping.

His list of past occupations reads like his list of past residences, though his life-long ambition was to be an artist until he discovered a latent affinity for writing.

“In art,” Rodney says, “I was constantly being asked to explain images constructed from a palette of emotions and ideas, which usually required complex narratives to convey their meaning, if there even was a meaning. In writing, the words are creating the images, images are telling a story, the story is evoking feelings. I like it. There’s nothing to explain.”

Rodney’s interests include: art, science, politics, whiskey and chocolate, music (collecting vinyl records), gardening, and travel.

Rating Report
plot
four-stars
characters
four-stars
writing
four-stars
pacing
four-stars
Overall: four-stars

reading challenges:

::spread the love::

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