
Donald Keith
Author of Mutiny in the Time Machine (A Boys' Life Library Book)
About the Author
Series
Works by Donald Keith
Associated Works
Free To Love [1925 film] — Actor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
Bob Tucker and Brains Baynes solemnly promise each other they will never again go near their time machine. So, naturally, they promptly volunteer for a project that forces them both to break the promise. The succession of adventures that follow find them traveling with a young genius of the future to the China of the days of Marco Polo, and a swing back to the present.
Mutiny in the Time Machine: a Thrilling Science-fiction story of Four Adventurous scouts and Their Travels Through Time by Donald Keith
Back in the 1960's I was a Boy Scout.
The best thing about Scouting for me was the monthly subscription to "Boy's Life" magazine. (At that time it was about the only mail I got!).
I would skip right past the articles about camping and woodworking and Soap Box Derby (Wazzat?) and go right to the features.
My favorite was the "Time Machine" stories. Two Scouts happen to find a Time Machine under a rockfall, figure out how to run it, and have historically accurate gently humorous adventures in show more the past and the future.
Meeting Marco Polo and Teddy Roosevelt and getting flying belts and mind reading pills from the future. Adding a Scout from the future (and one from the past!) to the patrol.
And real action and real boy-sized suspense.
Back in the day when you could nickname a character "Brains" and you as the the reader knew everything you needed to know about that character.
You can get the Time Machine stories from Google Books online repository of "Boys Life" through the years.
Or if you're lucky you'll find these long out of print board books -- both "Mutiny in the Time Machine" and the later, not as good "Time Machine to the Rescue", and you know, they still work.
Don't know what kids would make of Tuck and Brains these days. But they made me proud to put on my Boy Scout uniform back in the day. show less
The best thing about Scouting for me was the monthly subscription to "Boy's Life" magazine. (At that time it was about the only mail I got!).
I would skip right past the articles about camping and woodworking and Soap Box Derby (Wazzat?) and go right to the features.
My favorite was the "Time Machine" stories. Two Scouts happen to find a Time Machine under a rockfall, figure out how to run it, and have historically accurate gently humorous adventures in show more the past and the future.
Meeting Marco Polo and Teddy Roosevelt and getting flying belts and mind reading pills from the future. Adding a Scout from the future (and one from the past!) to the patrol.
And real action and real boy-sized suspense.
Back in the day when you could nickname a character "Brains" and you as the the reader knew everything you needed to know about that character.
You can get the Time Machine stories from Google Books online repository of "Boys Life" through the years.
Or if you're lucky you'll find these long out of print board books -- both "Mutiny in the Time Machine" and the later, not as good "Time Machine to the Rescue", and you know, they still work.
Don't know what kids would make of Tuck and Brains these days. But they made me proud to put on my Boy Scout uniform back in the day. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 3
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 30
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 2

