Signed First Edition - Bright Air Black
Book
In Bright Air Black, David Vann transports us to 13th century B.C. to give a nuanced and electric...
Darien
Book
Twelve Families. One Throne. Welcome to the Empire of Salt. The city of Darien stands at the...
Fantasy Books Epic Fantasy Mages
The Water Babies
Book
Shamed by his grimy appearance in the presence of an immaculate little girl, ten-year-old Tom — an...
Rhythm & Blues in New Orleans
Book
Rhythm and Blues in New Orleans is a comprehensive history documenting the rise and development of a...
Cheap Novelties
Book
The classic graphic novel by the landmark cartoonist is back in print for its twenty-fifth...
Lost Sphear
Video Game Watch
The next evolution in this new golden age of JRPG’s arrives with LOST SPHEAR, bringing a fresh...
role-playing
Fall of Kings (Troy #3)
Stella Gemmell and David Gemmell
Book
Darkness falls on the Great Green and the Ancient World is fiercely divided. On the killing...
The Secret Detectives
Book
The body seemed to fall for a long time. There was no splash, or if there was it was lost in the...
The Mark of the Salamander (The Island of Angels, #1)
Book
1575: Nelan Michaels is a young Flemish man fleeing religious persecution in the Spanish...
Historical Fiction
Deborah (162 KP) rated The Daughter of Time (Inspector Alan Grant, #5) in Books
Dec 21, 2018
Josephine Tey may have been writing in the golden age of detective fiction, but she's didn't stick to the accustomed 'rules' and went her own way, making for some very interesting books. The Daughter of Time is probably her best known book. It's a book that works on more than one level as it's about what it's ostensibly about, but I also see it as a comment on the meaning of Truth (The Daughter of time of the title) and of course, Tonypandy! In our modern age with 24 hour news, social media, 'fake' news, I'd say this book is more relevant than ever!
It's just a very well written book and I'll finish with one bit that really came out to me this time as simply a fantastic thought, beautifully put: "...perhaps a series of small satisfactions scattered like sequins over the texture of everyday life was of greater worth than the academic satisfaction of owning a collection of fine objects at the back of a drawer."