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Time Travel sci-fi books

Stepping out of the river of time — and disturbing the current.

299 books
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Rush Revere and the Presidency
Rush Revere and the Presidency
Rush Limbaugh
GMiddle Grade 8-12
Teamwork: A Chapter Book With Stories From History
Teamwork: A Chapter Book With Stories From History
Ernestine Tito Jones
GChildren 5-8
Never Give Up: A Chapter Book Series With Stories From History
Never Give Up: A Chapter Book Series With Stories From History
Ernestine Tito Jones
GChildren 5-8
Death's End
Death's End
Cixin Liu
RAdult 18+
The Complete Missing Collection (Boxed Set): Found; Sent; Sabotaged; Torn; Caught; Risked; Revealed; Redeemed (The Missing)
The Complete Missing Collection (Boxed Set): Found; Sent; Sabotaged; Torn; Caught; Risked; Revealed; Redeemed (The Missing)
Margaret Peterson Haddix
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Re:Zero: Starting Life in Another World, Vol. 1
Re:Zero: Starting Life in Another World, Vol. 1
Tappei Nagatsuki
PG-13YA 12-17
The Day After Never: A Time Travel Adventure
The Day After Never: A Time Travel Adventure
Nathan Van Coops
PG-13YA 12-17
Outlaws of Time: The Legend of Sam Miracle
Outlaws of Time: The Legend of Sam Miracle
N. D. Wilson
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Courage: The Time Machine Girls
Courage: The Time Machine Girls
Ernestine Tito Jones
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Lonely is the Knight: Lighthearted Time Travel Romance
Lonely is the Knight: Lighthearted Time Travel Romance
Cynthia Luhrs
RAdult 18+
The Dark Tower II
The Dark Tower II
Stephen King
RAdult 18+
Race to the South Pole (Ranger in Time #4) (4)
Race to the South Pole (Ranger in Time #4) (4)
Kate Messner
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The Big Book of Science Fiction
The Big Book of Science Fiction
Jeff VanderMeer
RAdult 18+
Long Road to Freedom (Ranger in Time #3) (3)
Long Road to Freedom (Ranger in Time #3) (3)
Kate Messner
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Time's Echo: A CHRONOS Files Novella
Time's Echo: A CHRONOS Files Novella
Rysa Walker
PG-13YA 12-17
Secrets: The Time Machine Girls
Secrets: The Time Machine Girls
Ernestine Tito Jones
GChildren 5-8
Pathfinder Trilogy (Boxed Set): Pathfinder; Ruins; Visitors
Pathfinder Trilogy (Boxed Set): Pathfinder; Ruins; Visitors
Orson Scott Card
PG-13YA 12-17
Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children Boxed Set: 3 Novels by Ransom Riggs
Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children Boxed Set: 3 Novels by Ransom Riggs
Ransom Riggs
PG-13YA 12-17
Dino-Mike and the Underwater Dinosaurs
Dino-Mike and the Underwater Dinosaurs
Franco
PGChildren 5-8
Danger in Ancient Rome (Ranger in Time #2) (2)
Danger in Ancient Rome (Ranger in Time #2) (2)
Kate Messner
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The Chronothon: A Time Travel Adventure
The Chronothon: A Time Travel Adventure
Nathan Van Coops
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
The Eighth Day
The Eighth Day
Dianne K. Salerni
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Rescue on the Oregon Trail (Ranger in Time #1) (1)
Rescue on the Oregon Trail (Ranger in Time #1) (1)
Kate Messner
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Stallion by Starlight (Magic Tree House Merlin Mission)
Stallion by Starlight (Magic Tree House Merlin Mission)
Mary Pope Osborne
GChildren 5-8
The First Dragon (7) (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica, The)
The First Dragon (7) (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica, The)
James A. Owen
PG-13YA 12-17
Andre Norton: The Essential Collection
Andre Norton: The Essential Collection
Andre Norton
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Revealed (7) (The Missing)
Revealed (7) (The Missing)
Margaret Peterson Haddix
PGMiddle Grade 8-12
Mayday
Mayday
Jonathan Friesen
PG-13YA 12-17
Obvious Child
Obvious Child
Warren Cantrell
PG-13Adult 18+
Abe Lincoln at Last! (Magic Tree House Merlin Mission)
Abe Lincoln at Last! (Magic Tree House Merlin Mission)
Mary Pope Osborne
GMiddle Grade 8-12

About the Time Travel trope

Time travel is the genre's great what-if machine. Send a person up or down the timeline and you can do almost anything: rewrite a tragedy, witness a wonder, or trap a character in the consequences of a single misstep. H.G. Wells launched the modern form with The Time Machine, riding the timeline forward into humanity's distant decline. Connie Willis made the device scholarly in Doomsday Book and To Say Nothing of the Dog, sending historians into the past with rigor and heart and a sharp eye for how badly even careful plans go wrong.

The trope's enduring fascination is the paradox. If you change the past, do you erase yourself? Can history be rewritten, or does it heal around the wound like water around a stone? Octavia Butler's Kindred uses time travel not for gadgetry but for moral force, dragging a modern woman into the horror of American slavery and refusing to let her, or the reader, look away. Different stories answer the paradox differently — fixed timelines, branching ones, fragile ones — and the rules a writer chooses become the very engine of the suspense.

It is worth distinguishing time travel from its tighter cousin, the time loop, which traps a character in a single repeating stretch rather than letting them roam the centuries. Time travel ranges freely — ancient Rome, the far future, last Tuesday — and its stakes are the shape of history itself. At its best it delivers both intellectual delight and emotional weight, the thrill of the impossible journey braided with the ache of knowing how time actually works: it only ever runs one way, except here. From wistful romance to ruthless thriller, the device bends to whatever mood a writer brings to it, which is exactly why the genre has never tired of sending people somewhere they do not belong in time.

Why readers love it

  • Journeys across history's expanse
  • Paradox as narrative engine
  • The past as moral mirror
  • Rewriting fate, at a price