Tourmalin's Time Cheques by F. Anstey
First published in 1891, Tourmalin's Time Cheques is a Victorian comedy with a brilliantly modern sci-fi twist. Our hero, Peter Tourmalin, is stuck on a monotonous months-long sea voyage. To cope with the boredom, he hits on a strange idea: he'll mentally 'deposit' all these wasted hours and 'withdraw' them later as extra time. He meticulously keeps a ledger, banking over 700 hours.
The Story
Back in London, Tourmalin decides to cash in his first cheque for a single day. Instead of getting a smooth 24-hour extension, he's jerked into a brief, confusing episode from his voyage—a flirtatious conversation with a fellow passenger, Miss Davenport. He brushes it off as a daydream. But the cheques keep getting cashed, often without his say-so, pulling him into more of these fragmented 'time islands.' He lives through arguments, romantic moments, and crises that he has no memory of in his regular timeline. Soon, these phantom episodes start leaking into his real life, threatening his engagement and his sanity. The book becomes a race to figure out who—or what—is cashing his cheques and how to stop his life from unraveling completely.
Why You Should Read It
What's so fun about this book is how cleverly Anstey plays with an idea we can all relate to: the desire to control time. Tourmalin isn't a scientist; he's just a regular guy trying to get a better deal out of life. His total confusion as his simple plan backfires is both funny and strangely relatable. The book is less about fancy machines and more about the chaos of human memory and regret. Those 'saved' moments weren't empty after all—they were full of small interactions he'd ignored, and now they're demanding their due. It's a comedy of manners where the biggest faux pas is messing with causality.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect pick for readers who enjoy classic authors like P.G. Wodehouse or Jerome K. Jerome but wish they'd written a time-travel story. It's for anyone who loves a smart, funny premise that doesn't take itself too seriously but leaves you with something to chew on. If you like your sci-fi with wit, social satire, and a protagonist who is charmingly in over his head, you'll have a blast with Tourmalin's misadventures. Just maybe don't read it while waiting for a delayed train—you might start eyeing that lost hour a little too greedily.
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Logan Wright
8 months agoThis is one of those stories where the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. I will read more from this author.
Ava Allen
1 year agoEssential reading for students of this field.