
Member Reviews

Ah time travel raises so many ethical questions doesn't it? If you get stuck in the past... do you make a life for yourself and risk affecting the timeline or hide away and potentially lose your mind. And what if your memory starts to fail shortly after becoming stuck?
Here and Now and Then is a fabulous story that explores the "what ifs" of time travel. It can be a hard subject to make sense of and Mike Chen does it with style. The emotional beats in this story are craftily handled. Several times I assumed the story might go in one direction and was pleasantly surprised each time by not being able to predict the plot. (Ha! It's like the author also can time travel!)
This is a clever and emotional tale about a man - Kin Stewart - and what he would risk for his daughter. It also is a love story that goes beyond the usual trope of the time traveler's love interest. This love triangle story takes us beyond the moment of first meeting. It's a story that explores an entire lifetime (or two) and what happens to a marriage over a longer period of time... Who do you choose and how do you go on? And what happens to the one left behind?
Characters were deeply fleshed out and well-rounded. Mike Chen navigates the past and the future landscapes easily, giving us enough detail to see main character Kin Stewart at home in each location. The women in Kin's life are emotional rocks for Kin to cling to. I can absolutely understand why he would not want to give any of them up. I really enjoyed this story. I'm looking forward to more from the author in the future (or the past?)

This was unexpectedly emotional. The book starts off with both science and action, but then becomes both action and emotion. The central question comes down to how to parent when you can't be with your child, and any parent who has been through this kind of separation will recognize how difficult it can be to find a way to connect when you don't have the day-to-day contact that is taken for granted.

Great story! I enjoyed every part of it. The characters, the time travel, the relationships, and the ending.
Definitely a book to read this year!

A simply fantastic debut by Mike Chen, and I feel privileged to have read an early copy purchased in a charity auction. "Here and Now and Then" is a father-daughter, time travel story with loads of heart and crisp, clever writing. The lead character, Kin, is an agent who travels time to thwart time-traveling criminals (he's not "Timecop", though that movie is self-referentially noted in the book). After getting stuck back in time on a mission, he breaks the rules by marrying and having a child, which leads to heartache when he is "rescued". Breaches of time travel protocol must be rectified, and Kin's daughter's future--and her life--is in the balance. With great pacing, exciting plot turns, and heartfelt relationships, Chen has created a story that crosses genres and will appeal well beyond the sci-fi audience. He has a reserved spot on my shelf for his future novels.

Here and Now and Then is a lot of things: a love story on top of a love story, with a good healthy dose of an unlove story thrown in; a story of a father's guilt and devotion to his child; a slightly hokey time travel story; and a chronicle of a powerful government agency operating in complete secrecy that, if not exactly rogue, is completely uncaring of human life.

I was surprised by this book. I was expecting a good read but this was great!
I loved the pace, the well-timed plot twists and the elements of time travel.
Definitely recommend!

I'm so impressed with this debut! It reminded me of Dark Matter by Blake Crouch, which I loved; but I found this story to be so much more approachable. I will happily recommend!

I couldn't finish this book. I read about 30% of it. For me, it was too descriptive and not enough prose which I prefer. I still think it is a very interesting concept. However, it is just not for me.

Kin is an agent for the TCB, a top secret time travelling organization in 2142 that works to maintain the integrity of the timeline. Unfortunately, Kin gets stranded in 1990 and has to live out his life. 15 years later another agent stumbles upon Kin and brings him back home. But Kin doesn't want to go back, he wants to live with his modern era family.
What unfolds is an adventure in what it means to be a parent and the lengths you will go to protect your child. I enjoyed the read; it was a bit more literary than your standard time traveling fare. It brought up a lot of questions about just what is acceptable to do if you are trying to save your child. I would definitely recommend it to others.

Time travel that hits a snag. Kin is a secret agent who goes to the past to hunt down bad guys until something goes wrong and he gets stuck. He makes the best of it - starts a new career, falls in love and has a child. Life is good until the future comes back for him. There are rules to prevent complications and it will mean erasing Kin's involvement in the past - everything and his daughter. Even though Kin was happy in his future life before he got stuck, it is still a big adjustment coming back and he can't face the idea of failing his daughter back in the past. Against the laws and what is best for his safety, Kin must find a way to get back to the past and save his daughter. Warning - the ending will have you diving for the tissue box. This is a feel-good time travel book with a big-hearted hero just trying to do right by everyone. My thanks to the publisher for the advance copy.

This is a good read about time travel with a heart.
Kin is a time travelling secret agent who is rescued from the past and delivered to his future family and the book deals with the family issues and emotions that arise from such a situation. It’s well written and enjoyable and not too hung up on the time travel elements, more the family dynamics which are really well developed.
A really good debut read with well written characters you care about and a storyline with a difference.
Many thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for the opportunity to preview this book.

As a teenager, I was a big sci-fi fan but drifted away from the genre. Mike Chen’s Here and Then and Now is good enough to bring me back. His novel exceeded my expectations. It really is a genre-breaking combination of time-travel, family drama, and hero’s journey—with a literary bent. The book contains enough techno-jargon and discussions of time-travel paradoxes to be true to the genre, but not enough to bog the reader down. The logic behind Chen’s time-travel seems plausible which makes it intellectually appealing. I was never left wondering if anything could really have happened: Chen made me believe.
Stranded on a mission to the past, time-traveling cop Kin Stewart figures he is lost forever. So he does what seems logical: he adapts, eventually marries and has a family. As his daughter reaches high-school age, Kin is rescued—too late as far as he’s concerned. But to avoid harm to his family, he agrees to return to the future. Because of a time discrepancy—two weeks in the future (2142) is roughly two decades in the past (1996)—Kin has to deal with his past (which chronologically is his life in the future), his current life with a wife and daughter in the past, and his future life with a fiancée he doesn’t remember.
Here and Now and Then, through well-plotted twists and turns, paints a portrait of a man forced to make impossible choices, a man forced to simultaneously experience his past and his future. His choices were so poignant I found myself sniffling toward the end—I don’t remember a sci-fi book ever making me cry. I was fully drawn into Kin’s character, the impossible choices he faced, and the fact that he’d do anything to save his daughters life. The three women in his life, wife, fiancée, and daughter, were well-developed and nicely complemented various aspects of Kin’s personality.

I really enjoyed this book, couldn't put it down. It was fast paced and the characters relationships were real and the pull in multiple directions hit home.

My favorite sci-fi books are the ones that build a credible enough world, but that focus more on the characters than on the science fiction. This is one of those books. Here and Now and Then is deeply human, investigating the complexities of family and loss and yes, time travel.

Wow! What is there not to love about this book?!?? Time traveling, complicated romances, how far parents are willing to go to rescue there children, Star Trek AND Doctor Who references????? This book has all of it and then some more with the enthralling writing style of the author. I literally could not put this book down. Huge thank you to the publisher for the advanced copy!!!

Here and Now and Then, by Mike Chen, is a beautiful story about a time-traveling parent. It's a little like Back to the Future II involving a grown-up Marty McFly, but instead of trying to save his child and future self from humiliation, he's trying to save his child's life.
The book is wonderful and touching. I loved the concept. What would happen if someone from the future came to visit us in the past and then got stranded? What would happen if they started a family? Would it change the future that you lived in?
Ken is a secret time agent who did just that. Eventually, they discover him, and he is ripped from his family in the past, only to be taken back to his family in the future... after 18 years of being away. How does that affect him? How does it affect the people around him? The book answers this question and more.
After being drug back to his present time, he discovers that the past still needs healing. His sudden disappearance destroyed the family that he left behind. What can he do to fix it? Well, you'll just have to read the book to find out. You'll be glad that you did.

A time travel book with heart! Here and Now and Then is not just a story about the in's and out's of time travel and its ramifications, it is a story of love and parenthood that hits your heart in all the right places. I don't always care about characters motivations, and about what will wind up happening with their storylines, but I really cared reading this. Penelope and Miranda were both characters I rooted for. Neither was meant to be caught up in the drama of time travel caused by the man the both loved, Kin. Our time traveler Kin is at his core, a father who will stop at nothing to protect his daughter Miranda. The twists and turns this story takes in pursuit of this protection is astounding. I really enjoyed this one!

I love stories about time travel. Finding a time travel story as well written as this is quite a find. I loved every bit!

Kin is a secret agent, a time traveling agent who gets stranded in the 1990's. He is from 2142. He decides to go on with his life, marrying and having a child. The Temporal Corruption Bureau finds him and wants him to go back, but he has a family now. If he runs, he becomes a fugitive like the ones he is here to apprehend. It's a story of time travel, but mostly of family. I loved the interaction between the characters but mostly the love. I received this book from Net Galley and Harlequin- Mira for a honest review and no compensation otherwise. The opinions expressed are my own.

I'm between 3.5 and 4 stars, rounded up.
I know I'm not the only one who finds novels about time travel utterly irresistible. It's not the science of time travel that fascinates me, although I'm always drawn in by the possible paradox of running into yourself somewhere in time. For me, it's more the thought that one single action, even the smallest gesture, can set off a chain of events that could change the world as we (or the characters) know it.
In Mike Chen's new novel, Here and Now and Then, Kin (short for Quinoa—when he was born the world was obsessed with naming babies after food) is a special agent for the Temporal Correction Bureau (TCB), in the year 2142. When a simple mission back in time to the 1990s gets botched, Kin finds himself stranded in the San Francisco suburbs—for 18 years.
After his initial panic gave way to acceptance, Kin realizes that he must live his life in the here and now of the 1990s, even if it isn't quite his real here and now. So he finds himself building a life—working in IT; keeping his marriage to Heather, a driven, science fiction-obsessed attorney, on track; and trying to maintain his relationship with their teenage daughter, Miranda. It's not all that difficult, but through the years he struggles with memory loss, debilitating headaches, and blackouts—evidence his brain is destabilizing due to all of the time travel.
Kin tries to write off his episodes as PTSD, but as they increase in frequency and intensity, they take their toll on his marriage and his relationship with Miranda. When the TCB's retrieval agent finally locates Kin, and readies to bring him back to 2142, Kin isn't sure he wants to leave the life he has known, even if he knows he never should have had it in the first place. And when he returns to his present-day, Kin is shocked to find he had a completely different life he left behind. How can he return to his "old" life when his wife and daughter are back in the past?
"Did a missing past even matter anymore compared to human touch in the here and now?"
As Kin tries to re-acclimate to his life and those in it, he longs for his daughter. When his efforts to keep in touch with her across the years inadvertently put her in danger, Kin realizes the only thing he can do is travel back in time to save her, even if it means the end of his life and the end of his relationships in current time. It will take courage and strength he's not sure he has anymore, and the luck of time, which he hopes is on his side one last time.
I thought this was a fun, poignant book, full of suspense and emotion. At times it got a little too technical for me (science is so not my thing, even if it's fictional science), but the story had so much heart, and you wanted to root for everyone, even if that meant not everyone would get what they wanted. Kin is a terrific character, even if you wanted to smack him sometimes so he'd just say what he was feeling.
Here and Now and Then is an enjoyable addition to the time travel genre. But even if you're not a time travel fan, there's enough emotion, heart, and character development to sink your teeth into. And who knows? Maybe it will even get you thinking about who you'd travel through time for!
NetGalley and MIRA provided me an advance copy of the book in exchange for an unbiased review. Thanks for making this available!