

It is a story of how we conceive ourselves - in relation to friends and family, societal expectations, and our own insecurities. It is a story about how situation can help or hinder people’s growth. The rather long synopsis above gives you most of what you need to know, but there’s more to the story than the dangerous of time travel.

Certainly, it is one of the year’s first must-reads. All Our Wrong Todays is an endearing, amusing, thought-provoking novel. I eventually did (thank you, Doubleday!), and I am delighted to report that the novel did not disappoint. When I discovered that he’d written a novel, I immediately tried to get a review copy. Does he fix the flow of history, bringing his utopian universe back into existence, or does he try to forge a new life in our messy, unpredictable reality? Tom’s search for the answer takes him across countries, continents and timelines in a quest to figure out, finally, who he really is and what his future - our future - is supposed to be.Įlan Mastai is the writer of, among other things, The F Word - a movie set in Toronto that I found utterly charming and amusing. For Tom, our normal reality seems like a dystopian wasteland.īut when he discovers wonderfully unexpected versions of his family, his career and - maybe, just maybe - his soulmate, Tom has a decision to make. In a time-travel mishap, Tom finds himself stranded in our 2016, what we think of as the real world. Utterly blindsided by an accident of fate, Tom makes a rash decision that drastically changes not only his own life but the very fabric of the universe itself. In Tom Barren’s 2016, humanity thrives in a techno-utopian paradise of flying cars, moving sidewalks and moon bases, where avocados never go bad and punk rock never existed… because it wasn’t necessary.Įxcept Tom just can’t seem to find his place in this dazzling, idealistic world, and that’s before his life gets turned upside down. You know the future that people in the 1950s imagined we’d have? Well, it happened. There’s no such thing as the life you’re “supposed” to have. An excellent debut novel, one of the first must reads of 2017
