What If You Could Bend Time?

What if time wasn’t something we merely moved through? What if it could be something we could shape, bend, or even escape entirely?

If so. How would you use it? Would you use it to relive your happiest moments? Would you use it to undo your worst mistakes? Or would you, like the characters in World Lines: From Space-Time to Apocalypse, travel within eras and discover that bending time comes with unpredictable consequences?

From a scientific standpoint, time-bending is not completely impossible. For example, Einstein’s theory of relativity suggests that time slows down when you approach the speed of light and that gravity can also warp time. For intense, astronauts on the International Space Station age slightly slower than those on Earth.

Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of time-bending is its impact on our understanding of causality—where the cause and effect become intertwined, a tangled web of “what ifs” and “could have been,” that can also have an impact on the foundation of our understanding of the universe. How would physics even work in this world? Would the universe itself be different for us? What if time was something we could push and pull, like clay in our hands?

In World Lines: From Space-Time to Apocalypse, certain characters known as “Alternates” experience time differently. They can step in and out of moments, sometimes against their will. Their world lines are curved, looping back or forward, creating a rift in which they can bend and dilate.

If we were able to have this kind of ability, would we create a utopia free from regret and loss? Or would we find that changing time is dangerous, with unintended ripples stretching across the universe? The characters in World Lines face this dilemma. We can see them caught between scientific discovery and the chaos it unleashes.

This is exactly the type of temporal chaos alluded to in World Lines, where the existence of alternates and time-space breaches create a dialogue that will make reading this book an experience while also challenging conventional notions of causality. From a neutrino mine to a military intervention to an ancient mystery, everything is interconnected, and the fabric of time is thinner than anyone realized—that will only make this narrative more interesting and good.

If you think World Lines is just a serious exploration of time-bending, you are mistaken. The book also injects humor and satire into the mix.

When logic leads to unusual science fiction that blends thrill, humor, and relativity in the context, the result is an adventure that challenges everything we assume about time and space.

So, what if you could bend time? If so, would you dare to remodel your past or the future? Or is the illusion of time control become the most dangerous reality of all?


Read the book to experience the amazing: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DCWTW3RR/.

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