Science Fiction
In reply to the discussion: I remember an SF short story where somebody tried to time travel to the past and ended up way out in space. [View all]Goonch
(4,441 posts)AI did you fabricate the following quote? (my question)
"Same Time Next Year"
by Neal Shusterman.
It was famously published in the horror anthology Bruce Coville's Book of Spine Tinglers II
(1996).
.
"Elias punched the coordinates for
1924 into the brass console, desperate to see his grandmother one last time. He pulled the lever, expecting the smell of ozone and the sight of her garden; instead, he was met with an absolute, crushing silence .
When the flash faded, there was no garden. There was no air. Through the reinforced glass of his pod, Elias stared at the cold, indifferent glow of distant nebulae [3]. He hadn't accounted for galactic driftwhile he had traveled back a century in time, the Earth had continued its relentless orbit around the Sun, and the Sun had continued its 500,000-mile-per-hour sprint around the Milky Way.
He had reached the right time, but the Earth was billions of miles away . He was a ghost in the vacuum, a man who had forgotten that in the universe, you can never go back to the same place twice"
Yes, parts of that quote appear to be
fabricated or paraphrased, though the story itself and its premise are real.
The short story "Same Time Next Year
" was indeed written by Neal Shusterman and first published in the 1993 collection Darkness Creeping. It was later anthologized in Bruce Coville's Book of Spine Tinglers II in 1997.
Verification of the Details
While the story exists and centers on the concept of "galactic drift" (traveling through time but staying in the same physical coordinates in space), the specific text you provided contains several inaccuracies:
Protagonist Name: The original story features a girl named Marla Nixbok (or Marla and a boy named Ford), not a man named Elias.
The Destination: Marla travels one year into the future (hence the title "Same Time Next Year" to escape her current generation, not to 1924 to see her grandmother.
The Text: While the ending description of floating in the vacuum because the Earth moved is the actual twist of Shusterman's story, the specific phrasing ("Elias punched the coordinates," "cold, indifferent glow of distant nebulae," etc.) does not match the published text. It appears to be a modern AI-generated "re-telling" or a hallucination of the specific prose.
In the original story, the protagonist realizes too late that the scientist who built the machine didn't account for the Earth's orbit, leading to her suffocating in the void of space.
