The dancer from Atlantis.

183 pages

English language

Published Dec. 30, 1971 by N. Doubleday.

OCLC Number:
162174

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3 stars (1 review)

AN ACCIDENT IN TIME Duncan Reid was snatched out of the twentieth century from a cruise liner in the mid-PacificOleg Vladimirovitch came from Novgorod in medieval RussiaUdin was a Hun barbarian who lived by cunning and the axeErissa had been a sacred priestess in a lost continentAnd a mistake in a time-experiment by a race from the far future had thrown these four unlikely comrades together, pulling them through a warp in the fabric of space and time to a world which was ancient history. The strange alliance that Duncan and his comrades formed in that unfamiliar world was to take on a significance that none of them could have foreseen. For not only their own future, but they very future of the world they had found was at stake.

8 editions

Review of 'The Dancer from Atlantis' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Challenging myself to read a dozen time travel books this year - Poul Anderson is always a good fit.
In this novel, four people though history are "caught" in a faulty time machine and deposited near the Mediterranean, a year before the Minoan eruption of Santorini (or in this book, Atlantis).

Anderson's historical research comes out in the novel; the time and place are well described. The reactions of 3/4 of the characters to this time and environment is also interesting speculation - the early Mongol discussions of cavalry warfare and the Slav's comparisons between river warfare and early open sea boats. The events of the novel are also well done, though the timed closing feels a little rushed.

The story is really told from the main character's point of view. He doesn't throw many comparisons to his background (a 1970s Seattle architect) and acknowledges that the Minoan civilization is …