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The Untime & The Untime Revisited: Two Notebooks of M. Jules Gauthier, Journalist of Paris Paperback – April 29, 2018

5.0 out of 5 stars 1 rating

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The Untime is a state beyond space and time, discovered by Professor Rémy Lamartine in the 1890s. His daughter Agathe, and her beloved Jules Gauthier, a reporter on a Paris magazine, become concerned when Lamartine goes missing.

Inside the Untime, they discover horrors beyond our imagining - hideous creatures which can destroy the sanity of their victims, and which seem intent on ruling our world. Accordingly, they reluctantly return from the Untime and destroy the mechanism that enabled access.

A year or so later, Gauthier and Agathe are married, but a strange outbreak of lunacy is reported. The newly-weds make their way back to the Untime, where they discover more surprises, and more dangers in this mysterious bridge between space and time.

Gauthier tells his story in Gallic style, and while he is not a scientist, he provides explanations of the principles of the Untime as they were explained to him by Lamartine and his friend at the Sorbonne, Professor Schneider. A captivating series in the tradition of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, with a dash of H.P. Lovecraft stirred into the mix.

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Review

This novel definitely gives the feeling of a late nineteenth-century adventure story, with labs full of apparatuses and Leyden jars, daring reporters, mad scientists, and travel through time and space. The characters speak with charming formality, my favorite phrase being, "No, no, and a thousand times, no!"

As usual, Hugh Ashton exhibits a wonderful command of language, and this time there is a new twist - the characters are supposed to be speaking French. So, added to the usual punctilious Victorian turns of phrase, it is possible to pick up a hint of Gallic flavor as well!

At first this book was hard for me to get into because it is so different from Mr. Ashton's other books (which I really like). However, the more I read, the more I wanted to know what was going to happen. At the end, I was saying, "I need to know what happens after this!"

About the Author

Hugh Ashton was born in the United Kingdom, and moved to Japan in 1988, where he lived until a return to the UK in 2016. He is best known for his Sherlock Holmes stories, which have been hailed as some of the most authentic pastiches on the market, and have received favourable reviews from Sherlockians and non-Sherlock-ians alike. He currently divides his time between the historic cities of Lichfield, and Kamakura, a little to the south of Yokohama, with his wife, Yoshiko. He may be contacted at hashton@mac.com.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ J-Views Publishing
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 29, 2018
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ First Collected ed.
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 512 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1912605422
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1912605422
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.7 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4 x 1.14 x 6 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    5.0 out of 5 stars 1 rating

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Hugh Ashton
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Hugh Ashton was born in the UK in 1956, and after graduation from university worked in the technology industry around Cambridge (the first personal computer he used was Sir Clive Sinclair’s personal TRS-80) until 1988, when a long-standing interest in the country took him to Japan.

There he worked for a Japanese company producing documentation for electronic instruments and high-end professional audio equipment, helped to set up the infrastructure for Japan’s first public Internet service provider, worked for major international finance houses, and worked on various writing projects, including interviewing figures in the business and scientific fields, and creating advertorial reports for Japanese corporations to be reprinted in international business magazines.

Along the way, he met and married Yoshiko, and also gained certificates in tea ceremony and iaidō (the art of drawing a sword quickly).

In 2008, he wrote and self-published his first published novel, Beneath Gray Skies, an alternative history in which the American Civil War was never fought, and the independent Confederacy forms an alliance with the German National Socialist party. This was followed by At the Sharpe End, a techno-financial-thriller set in Japan at the time of the Lehman’s crash, and Red Wheels Turning, which re-introduced Brian Finch-Malloy, the hero of Beneath Gray Skies, referred to by one reviewer as “a 1920s James Bond”.

In 2012, Inknbeans Press of California published his first collection of Sherlock Holmes adventures, Tales from the Deed Box of John H. Watson M.D., which was swiftly followed by many other volumes of Holmes’ adventures, hailed by Sherlockians round the world as being true to the style and the spirit of the originals by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Inknbeans also published Tales of Old Japanese and other books by Ashton, including the Sherlock Ferret series of detective adventures for children. He and Yoshiko returned to the UK in 2016 for family reasons, where they now live in the Midlands cathedral city of Lichfield.

In December 2017, Inknbeans Press ceased to be, following the sudden death of the proprietor, chief editor and leading light. Since that time, Ashton has reclaimed the copyright of his work, and has republished it in ebook and paper editions, along with the work of several other former Inknbeans authors.

He continues to write Sherlock Holmes stories, as well as various other fiction and non-fiction projects, including documentation for forensic software, and editing and layout work on a freelance basis, in between studying for an MSc in forensic psychological studies with the Open University.

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  • Mr. Nicholas Lang
    5.0 out of 5 stars Vintage Futurism
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 11, 2018
    If Hugh Everett III had postulated his many worlds interpretation a hundred years earlier, then Jules Verne might just have ended up writing The Untime books. They read as a period piece, but are full of modern ideas - as well as parallel universes, the delicate girlfriend turns out to be far smarter than the men around her, while the monsters prove that you cannot judge a book by its cover. It's great fun from beginning to end, but leaves you with plenty to think about. Highly recommended.