In a near-future London, the protagonist (who is never named) takes on a
government job about which she is told nothing. It turns out that the
UK has discovered the secret of time travel (from the past to the future
only), and our protagonist is hired to be a "bridge" to the present for
her charge, a man from the Navy presumed dead in 1847. This is
real-life Commander Graham Gore, who perished in the infamous Franklin
expedition. Along with the other bridges and time-displaced persons she
teaches her expat about such soul-shaking Spotify, the looser morals of
the age, and the end of the British Empire. Gore takes it all calmly, considering, and soon he and the bridge (called "little cat" as a pet
name by Gore) find themselves falling in love. But there are a lot of
secrets that Little Cat is yet to discover about the Ministry; clearly,
the government has an ulterior motive in using time travel, and soon she
and Gore are in grave danger.
I enjoyed how the novel explores
the consequences of defying history, and I loved the characters from
diverse eras, especially the spunky 17th century farm girl and the
quiet, guilt-ridden homosexual from 1916. Key themes include colonialism
(the author is of Cambodian descent, and her characters have diverse
backgrounds and perspectives), climate change, generational trauma, and
complex identities, all handled with a mix of historical realism and
humor. All good so far. However, I personally am not into romance novels
at all, and this is easily a romance novel as much as a science fiction
or speculative novel. I found this subplot frankly boring. Then, too, I
am never patient with characters who don't see the obvious; when, for
example, Little Cat hears about an obviously futuristic weapon in the
Ministry, she dismisses it utterly as a mistake, despite the fact that,
well, she just learned that time travel is possible, right? I felt as
though the book never really got itself fully together; I liked how Gore
adapted to the present, but the secrets and subplots that followed felt
rushed and unsatisfying to me. The book was overlong, tedious in its
pacing in some parts, and rushed in others. Alternating chapters which
tell what happened to Gore in the past are not particularly interesting
and have no bearing on how he acts or thinks in the present. And, as a
minor gripe, the author relies way too much on metaphors, some rather
silly. A good editor probably could have made this book more readable,
but as it is, I was disappointed and often put it down out of boredom.
Saturday, July 20, 2024
The Ministry of Time
by Kaliane Bradley
2024
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