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Joyce Carol Oates’ new book Hazards of Time Travel is a look at the past through the future

A high school senior says too much in her valedictorian speech, so she’s sent back in time, 80 years.

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AP PROVIDES ACCESS TO THIS THIRD PARTY PHOTO SOLELY TO ILLUSTRATE NEWS REPORTING OR COMMENTARY ON FACTS DEPICTED IN IMAGE; MUST BE USED WITHIN 14 DAYS FROM TRANSMISSION; NO ARCHIVING; NO LICENSING; MANDATORY CREDIT This cover image released by Ecco shows “Hazards of Time Travel,” a novel by Joyce Carol Oates. (Ecco via AP)


In Joyce Carol Oates’ future America, history and free thought are off limits. Thus, high school senior Adriane Strohl is arrested for treasonous speech when it’s revealed that her valedictory address is comprised of questions that her classmates haven’t the nerve to ask. While the curious student isn’t “deleted,†as some have been, she’s sent into exile 80 years into the past to the idyllic town of Wainscotia, Wis. Here, Adriane will face the “Hazards of Time Travel.â€

Armed with firm rules (no questions, no intimate relationships, no provision of future knowledge, among others), a fake birth certificate, a vague back story and one box of second-hand clothing, Adriane enters her freshman year at Wainscotia State University. Oates doesn’t squander much print on obvious wonderments in this setting. Save for puzzlement over a typewriter and the oddity of witnessing her housemates smoke cigarettes free from worry, Adriane’s biggest surprises come in the classroom. Here, while struggling to intellectually find her place, she falls in love with a fellow exile, complicating her existence in myriad ways.

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