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D**L
This is just a beautiful story, well-written and enough SCI-FI and Romance to feed that appetite.
This is just a beautiful book.A few sentences in the book will force you to "google" wordsand "famous" people you've never come across before.But I didn't find any of those limited occurrences to affectreadability at all.I first read this in 2020 and just reread again in 2025.
S**T
Unconventional yet intriguing
How You Lose the Time War is told from the point-of-view of two protagonists. Nearly all chapters end with one of them reading a letter. An unconventional choice. It has a rich, science-fiction word encapsulated in under 200 pages, two different points-of-view, a mysterious time traveling system, and a rich vocabulary filled with references most readers will have to look up.Most choices work in the authors’ favor. The novel never slows down, but the changing attitudes of the protagonists seems rushed. At the halfway point, the shift of viewpoint is not sublime but jarring. However, the conclusion brings the book to a satisfactory end.The title is excellent, the format is exquisite, the writing is admirable, and the ideas are creative. A worthy read with minor issues, this novel should be on any science fiction reader’s list.
E**N
I will feel both all and no emotions at once, let’s get swept up and dive in
I don’t know that I have sufficient words to explain the depth confusion, desperation, love, emotion, that you feel or reading this book.The format was confusing at first, but once you get used to it, and you consume each piece, and the seeds that are planted begin to bloom in your mind, and all of these threads start to make sense. At the same time with every new entry, you still feel confusion, you still feel a depth of emotion you can’t quite grasp, and you become attached to characters that for the most part, you can’t quite fathom.Red and Blue are agents on opposite sides of a post human time war. You follow them through their time traveling missions in which their actions change and redirect outcomes, they seem to both witness experience and celebrate each action in a detached dismissal and also reverence. They both notice each other’s fingerprints, actions, and methods in each mission, actively thwarting each other and each sides plans in this grand scheme that feels both personal and excessively depersonalized. they gain appreciation for each other, and so they start to reach out and converse and through these words and conversations they fall both for each other, and for their images of each other. It’s interesting to watch how they fall in love with parts of them selves that they’ve never before connected to, or had forgotten, and how they fall in love with this adversary who also feels like a complement.I started to read this book at my normal pace until I started realizing that while I was reading, I was incapable of absorbing each piece, and it’s totality. So I slowed myself down, and I tried to absorb the words on the page, the actions of the characters, the minutiae in the references, and the details that both the authors created, and the images I invoked from the words.This novel was definitely overwhelming, it was a lot to process. There were so many layers and details to absorb that I found myself going back and rereading to fully comprehend as much as I could. I feel like I haven’t fully grapsed the entire text and while that could be confusing and frustrating for some, I find that it may just be a promise of continued enjoyment.I highly recommend this novel, for anyone that wants to be challenged in their reading, who wants to explore the depths of a world, not even fully realized, and find promise both real and imagined between two people in the tapestry of a larger setting.I am both exhausted and exhilarated by this story, and I look forward to diving into it again soon.
D**S
Not What I Hoped
Time travel is interesting. Yeah, but here we have one more reason for war. The espionage is too much. I can't handle more reasons to feel paranoid. I read to escape the heavy stuff or to study writing. But this didn't do either job for me.Cynthia Farrell's (the Narrator) voice was good for the story, but sadly, I didn't feel she saved it.A friend recommended this to me. Time travel piqued my interest. Here, take a look at the blurb:Goodreads Choice AwardNominee for Best Science Fiction (2019)Two time-traveling agents from warring futures, working their way through the past, begin to exchange letters—and fall in love in this thrilling and romantic book from award-winning authors Amal-El Mohtar and Max Gladstone.Among the ashes of a dying world, an agent of the Commandant finds a letter. It reads: Burn before reading.Thus begins an unlikely correspondence between two rival agents hellbent on securing the best possible future for their warring factions. Now, what began as a taunt, a battlefield boast, grows into something more. Something epic. Something romantic. Something that could change the past and the future.Except the discovery of their bond would mean death for each of them. There’s still a war going on, after all. And someone has to win that war. That’s how war works. Right?Cowritten by two beloved and award-winning sci-fi writers, This Is How You Lose the Time War is an epic love story spanning time and space.Maybe it was the COVID brain. Maybe I'll try it again someday. Maybe you will love it. It just didn't do it for me.
TrustPilot
1 周前
1 周前