The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley was my book club's pick. I missed book club, unfortunately, because I really wanted to talk about it because I enjoyed it so very much.
The first half of the book was hilarious. I laughed so much at our snarky main character and Gore's observations about modern life. I laughed at how the author decided that she would have people time travel and then just hole up in flats in London doing nothing. And then the action started towards the end of the book and it took a serious tone that was unexpected, but not unwelcomed.
I don't know if I've sold you on this book, but I loved it a lot. 5/5 stars
Siegfried Sassoon (page 328) - was an English war poet, writer, and soldier. Decorated for bravery on the Western Front, he became one of the leading poets of the First World War.
Lines of note:
I slid quietly to the floor and leaned my head against the wall. I wasn't going to see a Ministry therapist. I knew I should, and I knew I wouldn't. (page 119)
I feel like this was a sign from the universe that I should talk to someone, but I know I'm not going to.
"He is a pizzle-headed doorknob," said Margaret. (page 122)
Pizzle-headed!! Lovely. Let's bring back old-time insults.
It was a moment among moments, but everyone was held in it, captured in a small and easy joy. I return again and again to this memory. It's proof, you see. Not everything I did was wrong. (page 186)
I have had this thought a lot in recent weeks. My life is what it is because of a series of choice, but surely I haven't done everything wrong.
I thought I might have the energy to perform every action required to make a cup of tea, but I was surprised to remember how many there were: kettle boiling, mug fetching, milk sniffing, tea bag choosing, teaspoon handling. (page 195)
Sometimes I wonder how I even make it to work, let alone actually do work.
But the stars aren't eternal. Most were already dead, and I was looking at ghosts. At some point in our planet's future, the skyscape will change. There might not be people left by then...These stars were a temporary, beautiful gift of our era - the era that we all shared, a human era. I'd die one day, just like everyone else, so I had better try to live. (page 329)
I thought this was beautiful. The universe is fleeting.
Things I looked up (in which you learn that I know nothing about Cambodian life or culture):
Éclat (page 8) - Ostentatious display : publicity; dazzling; brilliance
Polonaise (page 13) - a slow dance of Polish origin in triple time, consisting chiefly of an intricate march or procession
Voight - Kampff (page 54) - was a fictional test used by the LAPD's Blade Runners to assist in determining whether or not an individual was a replicant - a fictional interpretation of the Turing test
gelid (page 103, and then again and again) - icy; extremely cold
rhotacism (page 124) - a speech disorder characterized by difficulty articulating the "r" sound, also known as r-deletion, r-substitution, or lallation
borbor (page 149) - Cambodian rice soup or porridge
doolally (page 168) - temporarily deranged or feebleminded
stupa (page 177) - a dome-shaped structure erected as a Buddhist shrine
Gary Glitter (page 177) - Paul Francis Gadd (born 8 May 1944), better known by his stage name Gary Glitter, is an English former singer who achieved fame and success during the 1970s and 1980s. His career ended after he was convicted of downloading child pornography in 1999. He was also convicted of child sexual abuse in 2006 and a series of sexual offences (including attempted rape) in 2015.
Angkor Wat (page 177) - a Hindu-Buddhist temple complex in Cambodia
Tuol Sleng (page 177) - The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, or simply Tuol Sleng, is a museum chronicling the Cambodian genocide. Located in Phnom Penh, the site is a former secondary school which was used as Security Prison 21 by the Khmer Rouge regime from 1975 until its fall in 1979.
Saloth Sor (page 177) - YOU GUYS. This is Pol Pot's real name. Why didn't I know this? Honestly. What sort of education do I have?
The Marne (page 200) - A river in France; the site of a 1914 battle of World War I
Kindertransport (page 207) - an organized rescue effort of children from Nazi-controlled territory that took place in 1938–1939 during the nine months prior to the outbreak of World War II. The United Kingdom took in nearly 10,000 children. The children were placed in British foster homes, hostels, schools, and farms. Often they were the only members of their families who survived the Holocaust. [The line in the book is "We frame the Kindertransport as an act of heroism, a coherent example of Britain's intrinsic charity and anti-fascism. It's not all untrue - those orphans were grateful, often, thrived, sometimes." It's critical, though, of the refusal to take these children's parents.]
Deleuze (page 215) - Gilles Louis René Deleuze was a French philosopher who, from the early 1950s until his death in 1995, wrote on philosophy, literature, film, and fine art.
Rupert Brooke (page 328) - an English poet known for his idealistic war sonnets written during the First World War, especially "The Soldier"
Siegfried Sassoon (page 328) - was an English war poet, writer, and soldier. Decorated for bravery on the Western Front, he became one of the leading poets of the First World War.
Hat mentions (why hats?):
"You could make a lovely hat." (page 57)
"Did the fashionable still wear hats?" (page 64)
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How do you feel about time travel books?
I do not like time travel books in general- To me it's cheating. And things have got to go bad messing with time lines. I did enjoy " To Say Nothing of the Dog" which is a humorous take on time travel, and the characters tried to be really careful about how they interacted in the past.
ReplyDeleteI might have to try this one again- you make it sound very interesting.
I loved the first quote ( that could be me) and the third.
I struggle with time travel. I sometimes think it's done well (like this book and Doomsday Book), but I felt like it was really cheating in Harry Potter and don't get me started on The Outlander series. I just feel like this one really nailed it for me.
DeleteFive stars! Wow, Engie!
ReplyDeleteI find time travel to be confusing but am often able to roll with it if the story and/or writing override the confusion. I loved The Time Traveler’s Wife and whichever Blake Crouch was about time travel. This one sounds good!
I also really liked Doomsday Book which is a time travel book. One of my book club peeps loves time travel books, so we try to read those occasionally for book club to appeal to her.
DeleteRupert Brooke was an idiot.
ReplyDeleteI'm not big on sci-fi books. This book got really big reviews and recs, and I considered it at one point, but I just couldn't get into that genre. I loved The Time Traveler's Wife, but it wasn't really a Time Travel book as much as it was a character-driven book. Maybe I'll reread an excerpt and see how I feel again.
Ha. I love your hot take on Rupert Brooke.
DeleteWell, I love sci fi and fantasy, so it's easy for me to just drop in. This one mostly takes place in a near future, though, so it doesn't really feel like sci fi until the end and the action scenes.
I noticed that Rupert Brooke and Siegfried Sassoon were mentioned on the same page in the book and wondered if they were juxtaposed to show how Brooke was an idiot who missed how horrible the First World War was as the younger poets like Sassoon (and Owen et al) write so movingly about it.
DeleteThis does sound interesting! I've requested it from the library and will give it a try when the hold comes in. I do find time travel interesting, but conditionally. No using it as deus ex machina, please!
ReplyDeleteOh, yay! I can't wait to hear what you think about it. I think my enthusiasm is now that any book that distracts me enough from life is a perfect book, so I would like to know if I'm overrating it.
DeleteI am 100% there for distraction from life!
DeleteOoh! I'm so glad you posted this. I keep seeing this book- I know it got mixed reviews but since it's a 5/5 for you, I'm putting it on my summer TBR.
ReplyDeleteWoot. Maybe I overrated it, but I don't care. I loved it.
DeleteI don't like time travel books, but when you describe the humor in this book, well, I admit - I'm tempted.
ReplyDeleteLet me lead you to the dark side of speculative fiction...
DeleteI am a sucker for time travel books (I am almost frighteningly able to suspend my disbelief for some things). I felt a bit apprehensive when i saw this title for your post because I really didn't want to hear it slammed. It was basically a bit of fan fiction she wrote during lockdown, if I remember correctly, and I loved it beyond measure. It was hilarious, and poignant, and melancholy seeing the people taken out of their time trying to adapt, and fascinating seeing the love story between two people from completely different times - the widest communication gap possible.
ReplyDeleteThe first part of that book was SO FUNNY. I loved every second of it. I'm sorry I made you nervous about it - I genuinely like a lot of books. They're not always getting panned.
DeleteOh, the nervousness was purely a silly thing on my part, and you definitely love a lot of books. I am very 'everyone gets to have their opinion about books, even ones I love' in theory. In practice it is difficult sometimes.
DeleteI had this come in for me at the library but then never got around to reading it because of my giant TBR pile. Might have to put it on on re-order...
ReplyDeleteWell, if time travel stories work for you, this is a good one.
DeleteI have a really weird aversion to time travel in books. Like, even the mention of time travel makes me act like that octopus gif NOPE NOPE NOPE. But I'm so happy you had a five star read!
ReplyDeleteI get it. That's how I feel about most memoir and self-help. I'll just see myself right out there.
DeleteHow do I feel about Time travel books?
ReplyDeleteLike give them to me stat! I love them. And I want this book so bad. I asked for it for Christmas. And my birthday and no one gifted it to me. Maybe I should just jump in an buy it myself? Yes, maybe I should do that!
My favorite time travel series is: In times like these by Nathan van Coop. I love those books.
I can't believe no one has bought it for you yet. You'll love it!
DeleteI loved this book so much! I'm not usually into time travel or government thrillers, but I was so intrigued by the idea and the characters (Asian daughter angst is my catnip) that I took a chance on this one. I also didn't realize the protagonist didn't have a name until after I read the book. How wild is that? And that's also something that often will drive me nuts in a book. But I thought this book was so well written and funny and smart and poignant. It was one of my favorite books I read last year.
ReplyDeleteAlso - why did Pol Pot change his name???? I'm going to have to google that one.
According to a PowerPoint from the Illinois Holocaust Museum (I did not know this organization existed), Pol Pot means “Original Cambodian”, but Pol Pot’s real name was Saloth Sar. He chose to go by the name Pol Pot to deliberately express his racism against those who were not “pure” Cambodians. I do not want to dig in deeper than this, to be honest. The whole thing is terribly sad.
DeleteWell, seeing how I just wrote a post professing my love for time travel books, you know how I feel! I haven't read "The Ministry of Time" yet but it's been on my TBR list for months.
ReplyDeleteLove time travel fiction, especially when it gets messy.
ReplyDeleteI always bookmark your favourite books. Thank you.
I love time travel books. If there's time travel in it I will probably give it a go. I really loved The Ministry of Tim too.
ReplyDelete