
Alternate (Omnibus Edition)
by Ernie Luis
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Pub Date Oct 26 2015 | Archive Date Feb 01 2016
Description
In 2030, he became the most lethal assassin for The Watchtower, a secret organization that uses time travel as a means to bend reality in their favor. If he works for them long enough, he'll get to go back and save his daughter. Or so they say...
Now, after a fellow assassin goes rogue, Greyson learns the truth behind The Watchtower, all its dirty secrets, and all the promises they've failed to keep. With the timelines hanging in the balance, Greyson must choose between saving the past, or saving the future.
A Note From the Publisher
This book was originally published as a series of novellas. Please write reviews on the Omnibus page linked below.
Advance Praise
"It is as riveting as any lengthy sci-fi novel."-Readers' Favorite, on Alternate: Part 1 - Origin
Marketing Plan
Author prefers reviews posted on Amazon.com or Goodreads.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781519199607 |
PRICE | $2.99 (USD) |
Average rating from 22 members
Featured Reviews

I have to admit, I wasn’t 100% how I’d like Alternate, as time travel always has the potential to do one’s head in if not done right. Fortunately, though, this one hit the mark!
In 2020, Greyson Tolbert’s eight-year-old daughter was killed in a hit-and-run accident. Ten years later, he is working for the Watchtower as a time travelling assassin, with the promise that after a set number of years’ service, he will be able to save his daughter. But when a colleague goes rogue and he is sent to apprehend her, everything he knows about the Watchtower begins to unravel.
For something with as much time travel as this book has (and it has a lot), the plot is extremely well-structured, and never really got confusing. Potential paradoxes are dealt with quite well, and it was always clear what time period we were in. Greyson’s POV is in third person, while the several other POV characters were all in third person, and this worked quite well. The narrative unfolds at a really good pace. There were lots of twists, but they never felt like they were there for shock value.
The reason it only gets four stars from me is because I wasn’t particularly invested in the characters. I definitely wanted to see how the story panned out, but I wasn’t going to be hugely bothered by who made it out and who didn’t. Which isn’t to say that the characters weren’t well-drawn, because they were, I think being as hardened as they were thanks to their various pasts made it difficult for me to get inside their heads.
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