If there was a chair that took you back in time, ⏳🪑 would you sit down?
But let me remind you, it comes at the expense of the pain of all mankind.
The story begins with "Barry Sutton," a spy who had to rescue a woman who was trying to jump off a high-rise because she was one of those who had a "fake memory," as simple as the Mandela Effect, a phenomenon in which people have different memories from reality, such as some remembering that Pikachu's tail has a black band at the end of their tail, even though it's actually all yellow (we think it's black).
But the distorted memories of the characters in this story are so serious that some people remember losing an important person, or even remember that they are dead. 🙀 When the memories overlap, what happens is that they start to become indistinguishable about what is true and lead to a tragic end.
But that's just the beginning... because this book is about to take us deep into a completely different path.
The book will alternate from the perspective of two characters, alternating between the past and the present, and in that part of the past, the author will bring us to know another character, Helena Smith, the scientist who caused the whole story. She wanted to build a chair that would cure her mother's Alzheimer's disease 🪑, but the chair was sent to the person who was traveling to the past, so Helena had to try to correct what she had done.
Present-day Barry Sutton is trying to find out the truth about the "fake memory disease" until he finds that all that happens is sabotaged by someone who wants to distort time with a chair, and the only way to stop this disaster is to sit in that chair to go back and fix the past, without him knowing that every move in the face of history will have a huge impact that will destroy all mankind forever...
Title: Recursion of the Sabbath Times
Author: Blake Crouch
Translator: Daughter Zhongniramayam
Publisher: Fountain
Number of pages: 416
Well, we are ADHD. Although we like to read books 📚, at the end of a chapter we often pick up the phone to plow the feed 🤳, but it doesn't happen to this book!! We read it alone, read it non-pasting (unless when we read the words "Schwarzschild's Equation" or "Touch Volume," that's why we pick up the phone for information)
Personally, we are people who like to read sci-fi fiction. What makes us like this book is the point of transcending human limits and the philosophical question of... where we should not go when we have the power to go back in time. Of course, it will be used for national security, but the sole possession of power is also a threat to stability.


















































































