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Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: Time’s New Dawn: A Dark Time Novel by by D Gordon

Read full book blurb

A hidden anomaly points to a catastrophe no one wants to admit is coming. As Rebecca digs deeper, she uncovers a conspiracy involving a stolen time machine, a revolutionary movement, and a buried truth about the city’s impossible power source.
To stop what is coming, Rebecca must enter the past herself.
But the further she reaches, the more the future begins to fracture around her. Every answer reveals another cost. Every choice narrows the path forward. And saving the world may mean losing the very future she is trying to protect.
Time’s New Dawn is a hard-science time-travel thriller about consequence, sacrifice, and the terrible price of changing the past.
For readers who enjoy Blake Crouch, Andy Weir, Interstellar, and high-concept science fiction where the rules matter.

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Time’s New Dawn by D. Gordon is an ambitious science-fiction thriller built around dark matter, time collapse, political extremism, corporate secrecy, and the terrifying moral weight of changing history. Set primarily in New Hope, a futuristic city built in the Congolese jungle after the fall of the EX-199E meteor, the novel follows Rebecca Dawn, a brilliant scientist at Forever Young whose work with dark matter becomes personal when her father’s body begins deteriorating after exposure to unstable temporal effects.

The novel begins with a strong speculative hook: dark matter is not merely a mysterious cosmic substance, but “collapsed time,” a material capable of reversing age, powering cities, distorting reality, and eventually breaking the world. When a reactor crisis sends New Hope into temporal catastrophe, Rebecca discovers a hidden time machine in the lower levels of Forever Young and begins a series of interventions to prevent the collapse. What follows is a twisting, increasingly complex narrative of loops, altered timelines, mistaken identities, impossible choices, and devastating unintended consequences.

Rebecca is the emotional and intellectual centre of the book. She is driven, stubborn, brilliant, grieving, and frequently reckless, but her recklessness comes from an understandable place as she wants to save her father, her city, and later the entire world. Her repeated attempts to “fix” time become the novel’s most compelling moral thread. Each jump forces her to confront the limits of knowledge and control. Saving the future is not as simple as killing the apparent villain, removing a defective rod, or rewriting one decision. Every correction creates another fracture.

What I admired most is the scale of the book’s imagination. Author Gordon does not treat time travel as a simple adventure mechanism. The novel is interested in causality, memory, repetition, paradox, responsibility, and whether one person has the right to keep remaking the world in pursuit of a better version. The recurring images of the Veil, the missing stars, the reactor, the rods, Crate 107-Gamma, and the collapse of New Hope give the story a strong mythic quality beneath its technical surface.

That said, Time’s New Dawn is a dense read. The timeline structure is deliberately intricate, and readers will need to pay close attention to the chapter markers, altered realities, and recurring versions of characters. Some sections lean heavily into exposition around dark matter theory, temporal mechanics, and scientific explanation, which may slow the pace for readers looking for a cleaner action-driven thriller. The prose is often vivid and cinematic, but the novel occasionally risks overwhelming its emotional beats with the sheer volume of conceptual machinery.

Still, the ambition largely pays off. By the time the story reaches its later revelations, especially around Rebecca’s repeated interventions and the truth that the future cannot be claimed by one person alone, the novel becomes more than a time-travel thriller. It becomes a meditation on grief, control, sacrifice, and humility before forces no single mind can fully understand.

Overall, Time’s New Dawn is a bold, layered, and intellectually engaging sci-fi novel. It is best suited for readers who enjoy complex timelines, dark-matter speculation, dystopia, morally difficult protagonists, and stories where saving the world may require accepting that time cannot be mastered but only endured, questioned, and, at great cost, redirected.


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I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

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