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Marc McKnight book amplifier tour includes a guest post and Q & A with the author.

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Book Details

In the Marc McKnight Time Travel Adventures series, Kim Megahee masterfully fuses science
fiction and human drama into a story that transcends time ā and reminds us that every choice
carries a cost.
Captain Marc McKnight has always believed in order, in cause and effect ā until time travel
proves that neither can be controlled. In Time Limits, a mission meant to quietly observe the
past leads him into an alternate reality born of emotion. In The Time Twisters, McKnight
confronts a conspiracy that threatens the very foundation of democracy. Time Revolution
catapults him into the futureās darkest hour, where rebellion and tyranny are indistinguishable.
And in Time Plague, McKnight faces an adversary who mirrors his own obsession ā a brilliant,
dangerous operative willing to rewrite history to save the man she loves. Together, the novels
chart McKnightās transformation from loyal soldier to weary guardian of time itself ā a man
haunted by what heās lost, and unwilling to surrender what remains.
An Excerpt from Chapter 2 of TIME LIMITS

by Kim Megahee
A few minutes later, they were on a path in a pine forest. A light breeze eased the heat of the Georgia sun and the pines whispered to them as they walked further into the woods.
McKnight glanced back in the direction they had come, then at the trail ahead. There was no one in sight. He pulled a form and a pen from his pocket and handed them to Tyler.
āFirst, the paperwork, Lieutenant. What Iām about to tell you is top secret and cannot be shared with unauthorized personnel, regardless of whether you accept the assignment. Is that understood?ā
āYes, sir.ā
āGood. Sign the paper.ā
Tyler signed and handed it back.
āVery good. Lieutenant, they’ve asked me to assemble a team to plan and execute missions using a new technology. The size of the team is fewer than ten, including two civilian scientists. Iād like you to be my exec for operations. I need a mission planner with leadership ability, and youāre it. The rest of the teamās still under construction, except for one scientist. Weāll be reporting to General Drake with oversight from Senator Lodge.ā
āWorking for the Dragon would be good. Oversight from Lodge?
Thatās not so good. Heās my Senator, but I didnāt vote for him. Heās a damned crocodile. I donāt trust him.ā
āLodge is the Generalās problem. Weāre the grunts. Our job is to execute.ā
āSo, whatāll we be doing?ā
āThe team is being called the HERO Project.ā
Tyler rolled his eyes.
āYeah, I know. Stay with me, Lieutenant. HERO stands for Historical Event Research Organization. In a nutshell, weāre going to be researching and validating historical events. Here, letās take a load off.ā
They sat on a wood bench alongside the running trail. McKnight looked across the path at a dogwood in full bloom and a bank of azaleas in unrestrained spring glory. Bumblebees hummed in and around the flowers.
āIf youāre trying to sell me on how exciting the project will be, youāre failing miserably. Sounds like weād be spending the next few years in the library and on the net, writing papers. Doesnāt sound like fun to me. Is there something Iām missing here?ā
A thin smile formed on McKnightās face. āWell, Lieutenant, I daresay weāll be doing paperwork. I didnāt mention libraries or the net.ā
Tyler scrunched up his face. āThen how? No library, no net.
Whereās that leave us? Interviewing elderly witnesses?ā
McKnight shook his head, waiting for Tyler to make the leap.
Tyler sat on the bench, his elbows on his knees, his hands clasped together and his head down. After a moment, he looked at McKnight.
āYou canāt be suggesting what Iām thinking.ā
Heās getting there. āAnd what is that, Lieutenant?ā
āNope. Iām not going to say it. I must be missing something.ā He paused. āAll right. How do we witness an event in the past? We donāt have the technology toā¦. Wait, you mentioned a new technology, didnāt you?ā
āI did.ā McKnight allowed himself a little smile. One last hint.
āYou took physics at the Point, right?ā
āWhat? Of course.ā
āUm-hmm.ā
Tyler stared at him. His eyes narrowed and darted around. He resumed the position with his elbows on his knees and his eyes on the ground.
āWhoās the scientist?ā he said without looking up.
āRobert Astalos. He does research at MITāā
āI’m familiar with him. I read a white paper he and his family wrote last year about interstellar propulsion. Son and grandson, I believe, all with the same name. Letās see⦠Einstein related speeds close to the speed of light with time slowing down. Nobody has proved that wrong. And gravity is not a force, but a distortion of time-space. Everitt validated that.ā Tyler sat up straight and looked McKnight in the eye. āAstalos invented time travel?ā
Bingo. āWell, Iāll let him share the specifics with you, but thatās the bottom line. Interested, Lieutenant?ā
āAre you kidding? Who wouldnāt be? Anything else you want to tell me? Do we have aliens in Area 51?ā
McKnight laughed. āNot that I know of. Want the rest of the details, Lieutenant?ā
āYes, sir. You bet I do.ā
āI thought you might. Hereās the short form. Weāll operate out of the DC area. Only a few people know about this. The charter for the HERO Team is strictly research. Weāre forbidden to do anything that
might affect history. Thereās a mandatory risk/benefit analysis and research period required before traveling to make sure we cover the bases. No options, no exceptions, unless the President issues an
Executive Order to bypass the process.
āThe other civilian on the team will be another planner, your civilian counterpart. He or she hasnāt been picked yet. The Generalās reserved the right to pick that person. You and I get no say,ā McKnight said, holding up his hand to cut off any objection. āWe need a shitload of testing before we can do any work. We donāt know enough about the technology yet. Questions?ā
āHa! Only a few hundred. This is supposed to be secret? Nobody outside the organization knows about it?ā
āWell, for as long as that lasts. Congress is involved, right?ā
āYeah. Iām surprised the word isn’t out already.ā
McKnight shrugged. āThe day is young. But yes, until we hear otherwise from the General, the project doesnāt exist and weāre working on special projects for Colonel Stewart.ā
āOkay. Why do we need the civilian planner?ā Tyler asked.
āThe official word is to balance the team. I suspect itās because Congress doesnāt trust the military. I assume itāll be an egghead guy with serious credentials and no government ties. Drake wants someone with no agenda.ā
āGot it. Do you have anyone else in mind for the team?ā
āI do,ā McKnight said. He pulled a folded piece of paper from his breast pocket and handed it to Tyler. āWhat do you think?ā
āLieutenant Mitch Wheeler. From North Georgia College, right? Good pick. Has a degree in physics if I remember correctly.ā
āYep. That one was easy. And his buddy Hatcher, too.ā
āYes, sir. Should be a good team.ā Tyler handed the list back.
āGlad you approve.ā McKnight checked the time on his phone. āI need to go catch a plane, Lieutenant. Transition your work ASAP and report to me in DC Monday week. Questions?ā
āYes, sir, but they can wait until next week.ā
āVery good. I have two more instructions for you.ā He stood and Tyler followed.
āWhatās that, sir?ā
McKnight smiled at his new executive officer. āNumber one, donāt bring any preconceptions about time travel with you. Doctor Astalos says most of what the science fiction writers came up with was wrong.ā
āAnd number two?ā
āThe other two Robert Astalosās? The men that coauthored that paper?ā
āYes?ā
āThey arenāt his son and grandson. Theyāre all him. They call themselves Robert, Rob and Robby, but theyāre all the same guy.ā
Author Details

Kim Megaheeās stories come from a place of reflection ā shaped by a lifetime of teaching,
coding, and asking questions about how we change the world around us. His background in
mathematics and programming gives his fiction structure and authenticity, but his heart as an
educator brings warmth and compassion to even the most technical premise. Now retired, Kim
writes full-time from Gainesville, Georgia, with the support of his wife, Martha, and the constant
company of their toy poodle, Leo. Learn more on his website, or connect through Instagram and
Facebook.
Amazon: https://amzn.to/3KZZylK
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/series/290364-marc-mcknight-time-travel-adventures
(only shows first two)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/55232538-time-revolution
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/58638675-time-plague
Guest Post
The Best Writing Advice I Ever Got!
My sister Laura invited me to her church one Sunday. To my surprise, the program that day was more
secular than religious.
The speaker challenged us ā āWhat are you doing with the time of your life? Are you spending your
time doing things that improve your heart or mind or soul?ā
This pushed me onto a path of thought I had never gone down before. How was I using the time of
my life?
āWORKINGā was my first response. I worked 60+ hours a week for a computer consulting firm. It
was fun, fulfilling work, and I enjoyed it. But it occurred to me I had no social life and no outlet for
pent-up energy.
Then I remembered my TIME LIMITS book. Iād worked on it for two years but completed only a few
chapters ā and I wasnāt satisfied with them.
āI should finish my book,ā I said to Laura.
We talked about it as we drove home, and Laura suggested we stop at a local Starbucks for coffee.
She didnāt have to ask me twice. If coffee is involved, Iām there!
We ordered in so we could chat and spend time together. We continued to talk about the book. In the
conversation, I mentioned that I rarely have time to work on it.
Someone touched me on the shoulder. I turned, and next to me sat a man with glasses and a cane.
āSorry,ā he said. āI didnāt mean to eavesdrop, but Iām an author, and if you arenāt writing every day,
then youāre kidding yourself.ā
The stranger was Shane Etter, a successful horror-suspense writer.
That night, his words surfaced repeatedly in my mind. I knew they were true words, and I didnāt have
the time to write.
Another piece of advice came to mind. āIf you think you can or you think you canāt, youāre right.ā
Okay, I thought ⦠If I decided to find the time, how would I proceed?
I looked for time, and presto! ā I found it. I could get up in the morning thirty minutes earlier. I
could write on airplanes and at the airport. I could write in my hotel room, at the bar, or at a
restaurant.
It worked! Eight weeks later, I had a final draft of TIME LIMITS, ready for editing.
The best writing advice I ever got ā write at least a little every day.
Author Q & A
How did you research your book?
I read a bunch of time travel stories. The primary setting in the book (the NewT Communications Tower in Atlanta) is based on the former BellSouth Services building in the same block as the famous Fox Theater. I worked there for twenty years.
Whoās the hardest scene or character you wroteāand why?
Easy. It was the scene where McKnight encountered Merrie the first time in the past. I struggled because I knew McKnightās thoughts would be all over the place with confusion, fear that heād make a mistake, and coming face-to-face with a beautiful woman. I tried it several ways, then wrote the scene from Merrieās point of view. It turned out to be easier, and added to her character.
Where do you get your ideas?
Mostly out of my head. I get an idea and write the movie Iād like to see. The TIME LIMITS characters have taken a life of their own, and I get ideas from their personalities.
What sets your book apart from others in its genre?
In my stories, time travel technology is in its infancy. With a reasonable amount of power, you can only visit the same date that is a multiple of 25 years from the present date, plus or minus a week. Outside of those parameters, the power requirement is too big to be practical. I wanted a sense of urgency for every travel event.
What helps you overcome writerās block?
Writers ā donāt hate me ā but Iāve never had writerās block. When Iām away from my desk, I may get a little edgy. But when I sit at my desk, Iāll just look for more trouble for the hero, and that gets the creative juices going.
Whatās your favorite compliment youāve received as a writer?
At the doctorās office (of all places), Martha and I ran into her childhood friend, who said she had read all my books and loved them. My feet didnāt touch the ground for the rest of the day.
Do you write every day? Whatās your schedule?
I write every day when I have a book project under way. During that time, I try to write for 2-3 hours in the morning and spend 2 hours in the afternoon on marketing.
Where do you writeāhome, coffee shop, train?
Before I retired, I wrote everywhere ā Starbucks, hotel rooms or bars, airplanes, airports, etc. Since retirement, I mostly write at my desk at home, though I admit I have carried a laptop on vacation.
Any quirky writing rituals or must-have snacks?
I donāt outline the entire book, but I do document the events/words/ideas I want to cover in each chapter. So, Iām a pantser-plotter (LOL). Snacks? I want coffee. Real coffee, not half-caff or decaf.
Why did you choose this setting/topic?
For TIME LIMITS, I worked in the bookās office tower for twenty years. I knew the building well and got the idea about an executive being murdered in an office tower and using time travel to investigate the case 50 years later.
If your book became a movie, who would star in it?
Simple question. I drew from all the movies I have seen. For example, my daughter Megan demanded that McKnight be played by a 30-year-old Henry Cavill. When I envisioned Merrie, there was only one person who fit the character: Amy Adams in her twenties. I have an actor in mind for all characters, but Iāll save them for another time.
Which author(s) most inspired you?
Tom Clancy, H. G. Wells, Isaac Asimov, plus Frank Herbert and J.R.R. Tolkien (for their vivid world-building). When we first met, Martha and I discovered our favorite books were the same book: EXECUTIVE ORDERS by Tom Clancy.
Whatās your go-to comfort food?
Atlas Pizza in Gainesville, GA. Itās been around a long time. If you ever find yourself in our town, check it out. Itās in the town square downtown. You canāt miss it.
What are you binge-watching right now?
Outlander. There are a few more on Marthaās list.
If you could time-travel, where would you go?
The University of Georgia campus, 1973. Thereās a certain girl Iād advise myself to avoid at all costs. Also, Iād tell myself not to get involved with another girl who thought she was available but wasnāt. But all things considered, I am who I am because I went through those trying times and eventually found my soulmate. Okay, so never mind!
Which 3 books would you bring to a desert island?
Very hard choice. First, my Bible, then EXECUTIVE ORDERS by Tom Clancy, and the Foxfire book that tells you how to survive on a desert island.
What made you laugh this week?
Some funny cat and dog videos on TikTok. They are addictive, and they crack me up.
Tour Schedule
October 20th
Chapter Break
https://chapterbreak.net
I Smell Sheep
http://www.ismellsheep.com
October 22nd
Author Anthony Avina’s Blog
http://www.authoranthonyavina.com
October 23rd
Country Mamas With Kids
https://countrymamaswithkids.com
October 24th
@gallaghergirlreads
https://www.instagram.com/gallaghergirlreads
October 27th
@therearenobadbooks
https://www.instagram.com/therearenobadbooks
October 28th
Chit Chat with Charity
https://chitchatwithcharity.wordpress.com
October 29th
Whatnolareads
https://www.instagram.com/whatnolareads
Anytime between 10/20-10/29
What Is That Book About
http://www.whatisthatbookabout.com
The Strawberry Post
https://thestrawberrypost.wordpress.com
@aibibyreads
http://instagram.com/aibibyreads
Riley’s Hobbies & Books
https://www.instagram.com/rileyshobbiesandbooks/
Stacey Ann Says
http://staceyannsays.com
A Wonderful World of Words
https://awonderfulworldofwordsa.blogspot.com
Sarandipity’s
https://sarandipitys.com
@sudeshnalovesreading
https://www.instagram.com/sudeshnalovesreading
