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Time Lottery

AUTHOR: Nancy Moser
ISBN: 1586605879

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         Editorial Review

Time Lottery
- Book Review,
by Nancy Moser


Kathy Tyers, author
"Time Lottery" is a memorable character novel dealing with the lifelong repercussions of good and bad choices . . . and God’s sovereignty.


Randall Ingermanson, author
Who wouldn't want to go back in time and take another shot at some of those roads-not-taken? Highly recommended!


Colleen Coble, author
Time Lottery is that rare read: a book that makes you take stock of how you're living your life.


A reader from Nebraska
I want to read it again to catch all the twist and turns with the past, present and connecting lives.


A reader from Oregon
You got me thinking about my own life. What an idea! I love your characters and dialogue.


Book Description
What if you had a chance to go back in time and relive one decisive moment that changed the course of your life? Now, there is a way: The Time Lottery. The result of 22 years of scientific research, it's finally ready for the public. Three winners of this unique marriage between marketing and time-travel technology ear the chance to travel back into their alternate reality-their Alternity-to relive one moment they've always wished they could change..to revisit that "what-if" question that plagues them. But when one man murders a Time Lottery winner then takes his place, another tries to collect life insurance on his wife who's now in the past, and the police clamor to shut down the whole enterprise, it's time God to get involved. Or maybe He's been in on this whole thing from the beginning, using it for His own redemptive purposes all along the way...


About the Author
Nancy Moser is an accomplished author of fiction and nonfiction, as well as an inspirational speaker. Her previous work includes popular novels such as The Seat Beside Me and the Mustard Seed series. She makes her home in the Midwestern United States.


Excerpted from Time Lottery by Nancy Moser. Copyright © 2002. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
PROLOGUE The front door was open. Alexander MacMillan shook his head, peeved that Holly would be so careless. They’d made an agreement: When Holly was home alone with Andrew, the front door would remain locked. You did not live in a five-thousand-square-foot home without taking some precautions, especially with the amount of travel Mac’s job required. Marketing everything from corporations to movie stars was out-of-town work. Their agreement was a way for him to feel at ease leaving his family behind. He walked in. "Holly? Why is the front door—?" A vase from the foyer table lay on the floor, broken. Mac noted the silence for the first time. "Holly? Andrew?" No answer. His eyes were drawn to the foyer table. A family photo was face down, the table itself was a few inches cockeyed from the wall. "Holly?" He looked to the left. The living room was pristine. An elegant room for entertaining CEOs and Hollywood bigshots. Nothing was wrong there. It’s fine. They’re out in the pool taking a dip until I get home. Maybe Holly went out the patio door, but then Andrew wanted to drag his wagon back there so he went out the front, leaving the door open. It was the wind that knocked the vase over. He remembered her words just an hour before: "Hurry home. Hot dogs, lime Jell-O, and grape Kool-Aid await." Andrew’s favorite meal. For his fourth birthday. A sound came from the kitchen. Mac held his breath. It was the pop and sizzle of boiling water hopping over the top of a pan onto a hot burner. Holly wouldn’t leave water boiling. His insides quivered. Something made him not want to look in the kitchen. He took a deep breath, then headed toward the sound. Maybe if he acted normal, everything would be— He saw them. Things would never be normal again. CHAPTER 1 Mac’s eyes shot open. The silence of the darkened living room covered him like a shroud. He wiped the sweat from his forehead. If only. It was a familiar mantra. It had no object, no verb, no adjective to soften or enhance. He sat up on the couch and rubbed his face, forcing reality into his pores. It had been nine months since he’d come home to a house full of death and pain. Still, grief and guilt were all-consuming. Debilitating. He found himself daydreaming a lot these days. It was an escape, a way to snatch moments of time where he could try to change what had happened, make it all go away. Over the last weeks, the daydreams had grown stronger. Clearer. Frantically real. Colors, shapes, sounds—he tapped into all of them, desperately trying to change what was into what could have been. Mac forced himself to his feet and stumbled through the shadows. Help me, God. I don’t want to hurt anymore. Show me how to move on. He tripped over a pile of books and fell to his knees. But I can’t move on. Can’t move. Can’t. Oh, to lay there forever and never get up. Never see the light. Expire in the darkness of death, strangled in the smell of dust and fibers. "Daddy?" Mac saw Andrew standing in the foyer. He forced the tears away. "What is it, buddy?" "Are you thinking about Mommy again?" Mac cleared his throat. "Yes." Andrew padded across the carpet, the feet of his pajamas making a scruff-scruff sound. He wrapped his arms around his father’s neck and Mac pulled his son’s head close. He stroked the tousled hair, careful to avoid the scars. The physical ones, at least. "I wish we could go back, Daddy." "Go back where?" "To before Mommy went to heaven." Mac was shocked that his little boy’s wish mirrored his own. Yet why should he be? Mac had come upon the aftermath of the violence. His son had lived it. This little four-year-old had seen the stranger appear at the door, demanding money, ranting about some slight he’d endured during one of Mac’s publicity campaigns. Andrew had looked to his mother to explain. Her fear had sparked his own. He’d seen his mother fight. Heard her scream. He’d tried to save her, only to be flung across the room to hit his head on the edge of the counter. He’d lain unconscious in a pool of blood. He’d had surgery. He’d finally opened his eyes to discover his mother was gone. Forever. Mac had merely found them. The guilt was overwhelming: Guilt for not being home, guilt for believing that such evil would never dare touch his world, guilt for living on without her. Mac began to rock back and forth. He synchronized his breathing to that of his boy, needing the give and take as much as Andrew did. If only . . . *** The call came the next day while Mac was making tacos for dinner. It was Bob Craven, his cousin. "You working much, Macky? I haven’t seen your handsome mug on TV for ages. You’d better watch it—you don’t want to lose your Image-Maker title now, do you?" "Whatever." "Whatever nothing. You’re important. You’re a hot property. You can’t throw all that away. Surely you’ve been getting calls from your VIP friends, begging for your services?" Mac glanced at the kitchen desk, piled high with requests and offers—most unopened. "Not really." "Well then, let my voice be the sound of opportunity knocking." "What are you talking about?" . . . Published 2002 by Promise Press (Barbour Publishing).


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         Book Review

Time Lottery
- Book Reviews,
by Nancy Moser

Time Lottery

SYNOPSIS

Winner of the 2002 Christy Award for best inspirational fiction in its genre. .. 

The entire population of the United States waits to hear the announcement of the three winners of the new Time Lottery-where the prize isn't money but a chance to go back into their own lives and change something. Though the odds are absurd, hope is high. The spoils are too exciting to resist. Everyone can think of a time in their lives they would like to relive. Everyone has an 'if only' that hangs over them-a dream or a regret that enters their thoughts repeatedly. If only they had finished college; if only they hadn't told off their boss; if only they had married someone else.

The three Time Lottery winners will be privileged to travel back in time in order to relive a portion of their lives in their Alternate Reality-their Alternity. They enter the past without the burden (or advantage) of remembering what happened the first time around. Yet through the technology of the Time Lottery, they will make a different choice, and live out different results.

After one week in their pasts, the time-travelers will be given an hour of Dual-Consciousness, a condition where they will be able to see both their lives with full knowledge. At this point they will face a unique decision. They can stay in the past-where the Dual-Consciousness will fade and they will live out their lives oblivious of the future. Or, they can return to the present, their lives made richer from their experience.And the winners are:

PHOEBE THURGOODPhoebe Winston Thurgood is a San Francisco socialite. She has two grown children, every material possession ever coveted, and a husband who is consumed with making money-which she is happy to spend. She has always wondered what her life would have been like if she had not become rich and idle; if she not been so weak and complacent in regards to Colin's unethical exploits; if she had not been unhappy. She returns to 1969 when she was the secretary of an ambitious new employee, Colin Thurgood, at Hopner, Wagner, and Greenfield.

ROOSEVELT HAZENRoosevelt Hazen is homeless.  He has a lot of what-if questions to choose from.  But will he get his chance to go back in time?  The odds are against him. CHERYL NICKOLBYCheryl is a single, forty-five-year-old surgeon in Boulder, Colorado. Her one regret is that she is alone. The joys of a husband and family have eluded her. Although she's had numerous lovers, she has never found a partner. No one in her recent past interests her, but there was one guy, back in high school . . . might he be up for a little commitment if given a second chance? She returns to 1973 . . .

Meanwhile, back in the present...Alexander MacMillan's job is to market the Time Lottery and be the liaison between the company and the winners. His association with the Time Lottery is no accident. Mac was drawn to the organization after his wife was brutally murdered, leaving Mac alone to raise 5-year-old Anthony. If only he could go back before Holly was killed....


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