Destiny Times Three


Read by Ben Tucker

(4.5 stars; 17 reviews)

Thorn and Clawly seek to present to the World Executive Committee some most disturbing findings, findings that indicate that we may not be alone within the nexus of realities, that there could be other worlds existing parallel to our own, springing forth from a specific point in time. That in and of itself may not constitute a significant problem, but what if one of these worlds was not content with their lot in life and were organizing a secret invasion into our utopian reality? (Summary by Ben Tucker) (3 hr 44 min)

Chapters

Chapter I 8:46 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter II 20:15 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter III 12:29 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter IV 15:33 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter V 18:30 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter VI 19:02 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter VII 13:36 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter VIII 15:15 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter IX 14:21 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter X 20:05 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter XI 16:50 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter XII 13:37 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter XIII 21:51 Read by Ben Tucker
Chapter XIV 14:20 Read by Ben Tucker

Reviews


(5 stars)

The best reader I’ve ever heard on LibriVox. What if people all over the world began having nightmares every night? What if it was the SAME nightmare, and we are all sharing it? What if you woke up in bed with your spouse, only he ISN’T your spouse? He looks the same, but on the inside s/he is a total stranger. This science fiction book predates Invasion of the Body Snatchers (which borrowed liberally from Destiny Times Three) by a decade. It is also among the very first to explore the concepts of the multiverse/alternate worlds/alternate selves. A great deal of the best science fiction owes a debt to Fritz Leiber. Creative, well paced, drawing on Norse mythology and Platonism, Leiber expresses the sublimated fears of nuclear annihilation, further political instability, and continuing to live in a totalitarian state. Published in 1945, when all of those fears felt very real and imminent. Many of the worries are still with us today in the fear of not just nuclear bombs, but biological weapons, AI, the surveillance state, etc. as well as destabilization of societies tilting back toward authoritarianism.