The Constance Correspondence
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Six months after an accidental trip to 1885, Dr. Vivienne Hartley receives an impossible message—encoded in a crystal that has waited three hundred years to be found.
Lady Constance Pemberton was the most remarkable person Vivienne met during her four accidental days in Victorian England. Brilliant, curious, and thoroughly wasted by an era that denied women access to science, Constance asked questions instead of shrieking when a woman from the future materialized in her drawing room.
Now, using principles Vivienne mentioned in passing, Constance has invented a way to reach across centuries. Her messages, painstakingly encoded in crystalline structures and hidden in museum collections, reveal years of lonely triumph and quiet desperation: scientific papers published under a man's name, growing isolation from a society she no longer fits, and an impossible choice between the security of marriage and the freedom to do work that matters.
Vivienne is forbidden to respond. Temporal ethics demand non-interference. The past must be preserved like a specimen under glass.
But how can she read her friend's words—years of reaching out into the void, hoping someone might hear—and say nothing back?
The Constance Correspondence is a story about friendship across impossible distances, the loneliness of being ahead of one's time, and the radical act of simply being heard. It asks whether the rules that protect us might also prevent us from being human—and whether some conversations are worth having, even when centuries stand between the speakers.
The sequel to The Importance of Being Temporal