This first gamebook of its kind

The Cave of Time - Edward Packard

This was the first of a new genre of book, the game book, though it came out under the title 'Choose Your Own Adventure'. I remember getting this book and the next book in the series for Christmas one year and I was pretty much all over them, especially since I loved the adventure games that I had on my Dad's computer (this was back in the early 80s). The period in which it was released saw a change in the way that games were being played in that there was a gradual movement away from board games to computer consoles and roleplaying games. However not many people had computers in those days, but craved a form of adventure that roleplaying games could only give for a limited period, so thus appeared the game book.

I note that Edward Packard came up with the idea while reading to his children. I suspect what happened was that his children, while enjoying the stories, wanted more involvement in the story itself, and as such I suspect he began to develop a way to allow them to chose their path through the story.

This is a very primitive version of the genre in that the description generally takes up the page and when you are given choices you turn to the relevant pages. Later we were to see the Fighting Fantasy gamebooks which used paragraphs instead of pages, and were generally a lot thicker with combat, dice rolling, and a character sheet. These books would begin to change the way stories were constructed, that is until computers became ubiquitous and people could now play adventure games in their own home.

The Cave of Time has you, the hero, and you are a very generic hero so that you could imagine yourself in his place, who while out on a hike discovers a cave, so you enter it and begin to explore it and discover that it will take you back and forward in time. There were numerous endings, and there was no actual correct ending, unlike Fighting Fantasy where the correct ending is the last paragraph in the book. However the endings that you arrive at are all dependant on the choices that you make during the story. One particular ending that I remember was the one where a UFO lands on a prairie and leaves behind a couple of humans, suggesting that this was how humanity first arrived on Earth. Personally if I was going down that route I would be a lot more sophisticated than that namely because I would have humanity as being the remnants of a colony established on Earth and then cut off from the rest of their society.

Later the first book in the series would be replaced by another book called the Abominable Snowman, and I am not really sure if I ever read that one. In fact I am very vague about which ones I actually read, though I did really enjoy this one and went out of my way to try and get as many of the others that were available. However there are over 120 of these books and I think I tapered off at around 20.

Source: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/349979500