The Man Who Folded Himself

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Man Who Folded Himself is a 1973 science fiction novel by David Gerrold that deals with time travel.

[edit] Plot summary

The main character in the book (or so it seems), Daniel Eakins, inherits a belt that allows him to travel in time. This results in a series of time paradoxes, which are only resolved by the existence of multiple universes and multiple histories. Eakins, who repeatedly encounters alternate versions of himself, finds himself in progressively more bizarre situations, and ends up in an even more complex situation than the protagonist of Robert A. Heinlein's 1959 story "—All You Zombies—". Much of the book deals with the psychological, physical, and personal challenges that manifest where individual time travel is possible at the touch of a button. The apparently extraordinarily narcissistic Eakins repeatedly meets himself; has sex with himself (including an orgy); and ultimately cohabits with an opposite sex version of himself. He spends much of his own contorted lifetime at an extended party with dozens of versions of himself at different ages, before understanding the true nature of the gathering, and his true identity.

[edit] See also

[edit] References