Talk:The Cat Who Walks Through Walls

Untitled
This article needs a synopsis. --Ortzinator 17:07, 23 October 2006 (UTC)

I don't believe Gwen is killed at the end. She appears in To Sail Beyond the Sunset, I think. 71.146.73.84 16:35, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
 * She does, in fact, and I'm changing that right now.   Ravenswing  19:01, 17 April 2007 (UTC)

=Time travel=

The article says the Time Corps uses time-travel to alter the past, but in Time Enough for Love Lazarus Long (who is a character in this book too and a member of the Time Corps) says that "there are no paradoxes", and that if someone goes back in time he had already been there (Predestination paradox). I haven't read The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, so I don't know exactly how it's related to Time Enough For Love. Are they set in different universes, with Lazarus being just a common character? -- Idiota Invisível 02:05, 4 August 2007 (UTC)

Ok, so I aint fully awake, but I wouldnt add to this unless I do it now. This seems to be a sequal to Time, but as they explain, this is all multi-universe, so... short answer, yes-no, longer answer yes-no. Lazarus who is who he is in Time, is the same but farther (behind?) on his time line, that he could be either on his time line, in backwards order... but for some characters, this comes before Time, and Sail beyond the sunset. Ok, so yeah, its him, same multi (different singualar?) universe, and like always he forces his way in to being a main character with a plot that isnt about him -- Leofairlight (talk) 08:14, 12 May 2008 (UTC)

"an inexplicable tendency to be wherever the narrator happens to be (see Schrödinger's cat)"
What? Schrödinger's cat does have an "an inexplicable tendency" if you will, but it's nothing to do with where he is located. 2A01:CB0C:CD:D800:956C:1C35:22BF:46F1 (talk) 09:06, 24 May 2023 (UTC)