New stand-alone novel from New York Times best-selling author of the
Honor Harrington series, David Weber
A Man of Two Worlds
Doctor Benjamin Schröder was far from a man of action. In fact, he was a
history teacher - chairman of the Castle Rock University history
department - and if his life wasn't perfect, it was close. Until, that
is, the discussion of his star student Elzbietá Abramowski's
dissertation on Operation Oz, the Pacific Allies' invasion of
Vladivostok, staged through occupied Japan to meet their Imperial German
allies, was brutally interrupted.
The psychotic episode that turned his entire world upside down struck
with absolutely no warning, and it was more terrifying than anything he
should have been able to imagine, leaving him with a complete,
incredibly detailed set of false nightmare memories. Not just of his own
life but of an entire ghastly world in which Operation Oz had never
happened. In which millions of helpless civilians had been
systematically slaughtered in extermination camps that were horrific
beyond belief. In which there was still a Soviet Union. In which the
Chinese Communists had succeeded, the Korean Peninsula had been
permanently divided, thousands of nuclear warheads had spread their
deadly threat across the entire Earth, and the Middle East was a
festering sore of bloodshed, fanaticism, and terrorism.
The knowledge that those false memories had come from somewhere inside
his own psyche was terrible, but with the help of Commander Abramowski,
a highly decorated navy fighter pilot who'd been forced to deal with her
own PTSD after crippling combat wounds invalided her out of service,
he's put his life back together. With Elzbietá's support, he's learned
to deal with the nightmares, to recognize that they are only nightmares
that can't - and won't - be permitted to rule his life.
Until, that is, a lunatic named Raibert Kaminski knocks on his door one
afternoon with an impossible and horrifying story about alternate
realities, time travel, temporal knots, and more than a dozen doomed
universes that must inevitably die if the temporal storm front rushing
toward the distant future isn't stopped. He has to be lying, of course.
Or completely insane. But what if he's not a madman after all? What if
he's actually telling the truth?
That possibility is the most terrifying thing of all. Because if he is,
the false memories aren't false after all, and that other world is just
as real as the one Schröder has always known. And if that's true,
Benjamin Schröder is about to become the greatest mass murderer in human
history, because he has to choose. Whether he acts or refuses to act,
Benjamin Schröder is the one man who will decide which universe lives
and which dies, along with every star system, every galaxy - and every
single human being - in it.
Including the woman he's discovered he loves more than life itself.