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![]() A cautionary tale as well as a story of love and sacrifice, 11/22/63 is a book worth stopping time to sit and read. The Washington Post From the infinitely inventive author of How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, a deeply personal novel about race, pop culture, immigration, assimilation, and escaping the roles we are forced to play. ![]() ![]() This time-traveling epic, which questions our place in the universe, presents a fascinating, sympathetic perspective to watch the entire story unfold from. In addition to contending with stopping a historic turning point, Jake has more to undertake: changing the life of a high school janitor saving a woman from her abusive husband and grappling with how time itself fights to remain the same. When the portal drops him off in the late 1950s, Jake must assume a new identity, trail assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, and find a way to stop one of the most infamous shootings of all time. It’s advice Jake Epping ignores when he accepts one last wish from his dear friend Al: to go back in time through a portal in Al’s diner and save President John F. One of the most parroted rules in time travel is not to change any major historical events, as you don’t know how it’ll change the future. ![]()
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