Solar Flares: Science Fiction in the 1970s
Book
Science fiction produced in the 1970s has long been undervalued, dismissed by Bruce Sterling as...
The Silvery Path (The Underworlds #4)
Book
Will it end in peace or a silvery dose of fate? Henna’s manipulation knows no bounds, Denida is...
Fantasy Science Fiction
What to Think About Machines That Think: Today's Leading Thinkers on the Age of Machine Intelligence
Book
Weighing in from the cutting-edge frontiers of science, today's most forward-thinking minds explore...
ClareR (6162 KP) rated The Book of Joan in Books
Dec 13, 2017
Wieland
Book
Penned by the skilful hand of Charles Brockden Brown, Wieland was one of the first American Gothic...
Vanguard (Razorland, #4)
Book
The Razorland saga continues. Since the war ended, Tegan has dreamed of an epic journey, so when she...
Ann Aguirre Fantasy Science Fiction Razorland Vanguard Young Adult
Cursing (Angie Faust Series Book 1)
Book
The day she killed her boss... Everything changed. She never laid a hand on him to take his...
series Cursing Angie Faust Series urban fantasy science fiction Lynne Murray
ClareR (6162 KP) rated The Ministry of Time in Books
Jun 4, 2024
The Ministry of Time is a clever book - it uses time travel and science fiction, with a touch of history that actually happened, and mixes it up with a hefty dose of romance, thriller and literary fiction. It doesn’t sound like it will work, but I’m here to say that it really DOES!
Ok, so a quick, yet vague, synopsis: the British Government has come into possession of a device that can go back in time and find particular people in the past. It’s been decided that the people they take are all in life-threatening situations. Those plucked from their time are placed with a “Bridge”; someone who will facilitate their integration into modern society.
The main pair is that of Graham Gore, a Polar explorer from the Erebus expedition, and his Bridge, a woman whose mother escaped the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. Not an easy adjustment for a Victorian man. This Bridge is the narrator.
Graham Gore adjusts quickly to modern life, but is modern life willing to accept him? And what affect does it have on him and his fellow time travellers, to be so out of time?
There was so much to think about whilst reading this - I was completely immersed, and it ended FAR too quickly!
Senlin Ascends: Book One of the Books of Babel
Book
'One of my favourite books of all time' Mark Lawrence 'An extraordinary debut that is well worthy...
science fiction fantasy


