The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley / Review

Published 2024-06-01
Bradley's novel “The Ministry of Time” blends genre and style to tell a refreshingly smart, funny and enjoyable tale of time travel and romance. Click ‘Show More’ for info.

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The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley
uk.bookshop.org/a/9054/9781399726344


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All Comments (17)
  • @doreene11
    I love reading novels that are set where I am at the time! I always go on vacation with a book set there so I can explore the sites in the book in real-time, also in my hometown or wherever I used to live in the past. Nice video concept Eric 📚📖💙
  • @joantionette734
    I loved this book it hooked me from the first pages. I usually detest overhyped books like the CoHo books ! Thanks for the review
  • @cindyhaiken5644
    I read and enjoyed The Ministry of Time but maybe not quite as much as you did. It started to be less compelling for me about halfway through, although I thought the way she handled the love story was very well done. Some of the speculative aspects of the story didn’t really hold together for me, and I felt it could have been a better, tighter novel with more careful editing. But it’s a fascinating premise and an intriguing story and I am glad I read it. And many thanks for showing us some of the historical underpinnings! Always appreciated!
  • @BookChats
    Loved to see the field trips to locations in the book in your review but unfortunately for me this book was a pretty mixed expect. It started so strong for me personally. Fun, voicey, and I actually appreciated that the author doesn't try to explain the tech. She actually mentions in the author's note that she intentionally over describes things the narrator is interested in (Margaret and Gore) and under describes things she's uninterested in, like the tech and much of the day to day of the ministry. I even forgave the disregard for how risky it might be to bring so many "ex-pats" from before the eradication of smallpox to our near future. But many of the reviews i had seen were mixed so I kept wondering where or how a book with such a strong start would fall apart and for me personally the last 30% didn't really coalesce around one or two central themes like I had hoped it would. I also felt that learning the Franklin expedition and particularly Gore were real and not imagined variations on real expeditions made the book feel uncomfortable like Real Person Fanfiction. I'm glad you really enjoyed the time travel themes! But many of those felt more retreads of other time travel media I have consumed for me. I thought the threads around colonialism, inherited trauma, being refugees and marginalized identities were much more interesting and i wish the author had coalesced those into something more central in the end. Thanks for posting you review!
  • @TheEmzies
    Thanks for the review. I had been wary of the hype around this as I've read a couple of hyped books lately that were somewhat average. I now know to wait until actual reader reviews come out rather than from marketing departments. ETA: Thanks for showing the memorial for the Orpheus which happened near where I grew up. Its a pretty well-known ship wreck on a bar that even now is not for the faint-hearted.
  • @ClareReads
    Thanks for this review Eric! I’d been a bit on the fence about reading this one, but think you’ve convinced me!
  • Loved your narration while u showed us the site. I don’t think I will read the book. I know it’s buzzing everywhere and I like sci fi but I’m not a huge fan of time travel books. The only two I read and liked where «  the time travelers wife «  and «  wrong place , wrong time ». Thanks a lot for the review. I love your channel and your reviews
  • @hannahyi2499
    Thanks for the review and field trip Eric!! I was considering buying it but I couldn’t decide
  • @erinh7450
    I'm really interested in this book. It seems such a interesting mix of things that interest me but don't usually go together, which as you say could've gone very wrong, so glad to hear it seems to have pulled it off. I for some reason love reading about sailing adventures gone wrong, and I first became interested in the Franklin expedition by the ballad about it, known both as Lady Franklin's Lament or The Ballad of Lord Franklin. I read a fictionalized biography of Franklin called The Discovery of Slowness by Sten Nadolny, which gives the story of his life and exploits but also focuses a lot on his having had processing speed issues (as in, he was a very slow thinker to the point of being thought a dullard in his childhood and how he compensated for it and/or found it to be a strength) hence the title. It was interesting if you're interested in Franklin. His wife was also a compelling woman in her own right.
  • Thanks for the great review Eric - I especially enjoyed the “field trip” part! I am so glad to hear that you enjoyed the book since I bought it recently but haven’t started it yet. It’s encouraging to hear a positive review from someone whose opinion I respect. I am going to move it up in my TBR queue! (P.S. Heading to Maine in a week for some fun, food and beautiful scenery! Stern Men by Elizabeth Gilbert will be my vacation read since it takes place in Maine and sounds fun and quirky!) 😍
  • I love JCO as you do what do you think about my favorite Soltice
  • @RSelcov
    You need to go on more field trips for us! I enjoy visiting locations used in books I've read. If I ever get to London, I want to visit the Greenwich Park, where a key scene in Conrad's The Secret Agent takes place.
  • @laurab2572
    I read the book and I don't have the same feelings. The title is similar to a Spanish series and the books reminds me of Spanish serie, the concepts of the Ministry of time, and outlander
  • @liahavisham3438
    I’m bummed 🙈 because I feel maybe I have bad taste if i didn’t like it as you and those many great writers, although I started the book hoping to love it. I almost couldn’t finish it, mainly because of the convoluted themes you mention, that never felt tied up and balanced to me. I found the tone clumsy, with a bit silly dialogues, nonsense metaphors, loosey timey-wimey explanations, and why is smoking described constantly with such detail? It goes beyond being a Graham’s trait. I understand fiction sometimes demands a bit of suspension of disbelief, but I found this too much from the very beginning - why would the ministry choose to pair a XIX man with a modern woman to live together alone? This could be very stressing for a person from that century and it would took more than a couple of weeks to be so nonchalant about all things XXI-century (this applies to all expats and their ‘nannies’, in fact). And with no surveillance at all, outside gubernamental quarters? I learnt later that this was an expanded fan fiction inspired by the tv show The Terror, which if it’s true sounds weird to me too. I suppose this is an example of genius marketing (as everyone is buying and reading it), and terrible marketing (maybe it should have been more clearly labelled as a romance novel+historic diary mix than a literary-high concept-adventurous-comedy fantasy, and some readers like me wouldn’t be so puzzled). Maybe the Ministry has access to another version with more Margaret and less main couple!
  • @pratgarg
    Ooooof. While the book is certainly being hyped up everywhere by influencers, for the first time, Eric, it appears you yourself are not fully convinced about you liking this book yet.
  • @booksandbags
    I was so excited to read this book, but I didn’t find it as successful as you did. It tried to be too many things—spy thriller, workplace comedy, time travel, romance—and didn’t do them well IMO. I didn’t get enough sense of the characters to really connect with them. While there were some parts of the book I enjoyed, overall It was just okay and ended up being my biggest disappointment of last month.