This book has it all: treachery and love, lyricism and gritty action, existential crisis and space-opera scope, not to mention time travelling superagents. Gladstone's and El-Mohtar's debut collaboration is
a fireworks display from two very talented storytellers * Madeline Miller, internationally bestselling author of Circe and Song of Achilles *
An
intimate and lyrical tour of time, myth and history, with a
captivating conversation between characters - and authors.
Read it * John Scalzi, New York Times bestselling author of The Collapsing Empire *
Lyrical and vivid and bittersweet. An
absolutely lovely read from two talented writers * Ann Leckie, Hugo Award-winning author of Ancillary Justice *
This is How You Lose the Time War is
rich and strange, a romantic tour through all of time and the multiverse, and
you shouldn't miss a moment * Martha Wells, Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author of The Murderbot Diaries *
An
intense, poetic work * The Times Literary Supplement *
Exquisitely crafted . . . Part epistolary romance, part
mind-blowing science fiction adventure, this
dazzling story unfolds bit by bit . . .
Full of fanciful ideas and poignant moments, weaving a tapestry stretching across the millennia and through multiple realities that's anchored with
raw emotion and a genuine sense of wonder. This short novel
warrants multiple readings to fully unlock its complexities * Publishers Weekly Starred Review *
Spectacular . . . Poetry, disguised as genre fiction. I read several sections out loud - this is
prose that wants to be more than read. It wants to be heard and tasted * Kelly Sue DeConnick, creator of Captain Marvel *
If Iain M. Banks and Gerard Manley Hopkins had ever been able to collaborate on a science fiction project, well, it wouldn't be half as much fun as this novella by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone. There is
all the pleasure of a long series, and all the details of an much larger world, presented in miniature here * Kelly Link, MacArthur Genius Grant recipient and Pulitzer Prize finalist for Get in Trouble *
Fast-paced and
intricately plotted * Temi Oh, author Do You Dream of Terra-Two? *
A time travel adventure that has as much humanity, grace, and love as it has temporal shenanigans, rewriting history, and temporal agents fighting to the death.
Two days from now, you've already devoured it * Ryan North, New York Times Bestselling and Eisner Award winning author of How to Invent Everything: A Survival Guide for the Stranded Time Traveler *
Sweet, hopeful, and unashamedly beautiful * SciFiNow *
A
gorgeous love story playfully yet powerfully spanning time and space in
a weave of imagery and delight * Claire North, author of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August *
This is the time-travelling queer epistolary romance I didn't know I needed . . . With precise, cut-glass prose - poetic and pragmatic at once - deeply compelling characters, and a tensely rewarding conclusion,
This Is How You Lose the Time War is
one of the most striking works of fiction I've read this decade. I'm going to be thinking about it - returning to it - for months, at least.
Read it, because I can't recommend it highly enough * Locus *
A wonderful tapestry of detail * Starburst *
I'm very rarely a reader of romances - but I think now that's only because there is so rarely a romance like
How To Lose the Time War.
I've lost the day to it, and my only regret is that it's over . . . It's a
smart, inventive, lyrical story that dances a
pas de deux down the edge of a razor, and I'm very glad to have read it * Stephanie Saulter, author of Gemsigns *
Intimately operates within an
immersive space opera * Entertainment Weekly *
The
intergalactic and historic sweep . . . services rather than overwhelms what is in essence a story about falling in love under a repressive dictatorship * The Big Issue *
Soars and succeeds in its
vivid detail, and in its
vast imaginative sweep . . .
Vivid, savage, tender, cruel, it is worthy of many readings * Stephen Cox, author of Our Child of the Stars *
An epistolary
masterpiece, a
masterclass in allusion, a deep dive into character, a
perfect manipulation of form and syntax and tone, a bending of the genre to create something that is
intrinsically science-fiction and yet
absolutely, gorgeously unique . . . This book
stunned me * Old Firehouse Books *
Lush, glorious, passionate . . . I don't know how I'm going to move on past this book - but do I need to? I feel
profoundly changed, cracked open and weeping, my heart in my hand, a songbird in my chest * For Every Helen of Troy *
A message that the world needs to hear * Cheryl's Mewsings *
If you took that sappy story of unrequited love, Keanu Reeves and a time-traveling mailbox, strapped it up in body armor, covered it with razors, dipped it in poison and set it loose to murder and burn its way across worlds and centuries, what you'd end up with is
This Is How You Lose The Time War, the
experimental, collaborative, time-travelling love-and-genocide novel by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone * NPR *
Compulsively readable . . . this book was one of my most anticipated reads this year since I found out about it, and it really
did not disappoint one bit * Reads Rainbow *
Strange and lovely . . .
unique * I Should Read That *
A story told through
lyrical writing you very rarely see in fantasy these days . . .
A genuine tour de force from a pair of writers at the top of their games * Streetlamp Halo *
Well deserves every second you dedicate to it * Calles de Tinta *
The worldbuilding is
superb . . .
This Is How You Lose the Time War wonderfully delivers on its premise * Den of Geek *
Beautifully conceived and written in shifting tones with clockwork precision underpinning its Moebius convolutions,
one of the most fascinating books of the year so far * Geek Chocolate *
A
short, but punchy book that was
highly emotional. I loved it a lot. The whole idea behind it is brilliantly ironic.
I loved the writing, and I wished it was longer * Umut Reviews *
Breathtaking. Brilliant in a way I'm not sure a review can illustrate. It h
as to be read to be believed * To Other Worlds *
Exquisitely pitched . . . I don't remember the last time I cried rereading a book, but this one manages it * Strange Horizons *
It's more than good. It's
astonishing. You should read it. * Espresso Coco *
Two hundred and one pages of can't-put-down goodness * Emily Holyoak *
We might call it an epistolary time-travel spy love story, but that doesn't really convey the book's poetic quality - it's one of a kind * The Guardian, 'Best of the Year' *
An intellectually rewarding read with prose of a high standard. And it's a must-read for time travel tragics like moi
* Dark Matter Zine *
Poetic and lovely
* Lucy's Novel Purpose *
A
brilliant reading experience. For something
different and beautiful this is
exactly the kind of story you've been waiting for * A Run Along the Shelves *
An epistolary novel about two time travellers battling one another for control of the future who fall in love -- Adrian McKinty * Daily Express *