Book Review:: The Ministry of Time | Kaliane Bradley

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley is a fascinating, captivating, historical – sci-fi – romance – adventure – thriller. Ha. It’s a mashup of multiple genres that will have you enthralled and delighted and leaving you wondering what-if…

The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley Book Cover

A young woman begins a highly secretive new job with the Ministry of Time. She is tasked with working with a specific time refugee named Graham Gore, who was rescued just before his historic death, to acclimate him to their ‘modern’ time. The shock of moving from 1847 and learning the fate of everyone and the world itself you knew, and knowing you can never return is quite the shock. There is a lot he needs to learn, and he has a lot of questions.

This book is exactly what you want in a sci-fi novel. Through an undeniably clever premise, so many ideas are introduced that will have you scrunching your brow in thought. Through a historical lens, is our modern society as advanced as we think? Or are there things we have unwittingly lost through the ages by our constant innovations and moral superiority? Methinks there has done.

Whenever one plays with time, things are bound to get messy. What begins as a thoughtful, contemplative book quickly turns into a mystery thriller with an unknown danger in pursuit of our beloved characters. Something bigger is happening, and there’s not much time to figure out what.

This book is immaculate. I loved every minute of it. I’d love recommendations of books with a similar vibe. I know I’ll be returning to The Ministry of Time many times over the years. Absolutely brilliant. I’ll be keeping my eye on Kaliane Bradley!

Details

Title:: The Ministry of Time
Author:: Kaliane Bradley
Genre:: Sci-Fi / Historical / Thriller
Publisher:: Simon & Schuster
Length:: 339 pages
Audio Length:: 10h 22m
Audiobook Narrator:: George Weightman & Katie Leung
Published:: May 7th, 2024
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars



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Book Review:: Where the Library Hides | Isabel Ibanez

Where the Library Hides is the second book in the Secrets of the Nile Duology by Isabel Ibanez. If you have not started this wonderful historical fantasy series yet, please start with What the River Knows. If you’ve not read it, the review below may include spoilers.

Where The Library Hides by Isabel Ibanez Book Cover

Inez is in deep with the forgery circuit mystery in Egypt, too deep to ignore – too deep to turn back. The only way she can get out from beneath her uncle’s thumb of control is to marry Mr. Whitford Hays, a cunning man of mystery & deception she’s convinced herself she can trust. But when he betrays her within days of their secret wedding, Inez accepts that only she is in control of her destiny – there is no one left she can trust. If she doesn’t work to preserve the legacy of Cleopatra and other Egyptian relics, no one will. Her fiery a relentless personality is back in full force for this conclusion to the series. But what I love about Inez is that she’s not all fire. She also has so much compassion. She has an open heart for forgiveness and wants to give others the benefit of the doubt, even when they may not deserve it.

In this novel she is put through many trials, and jumps head first into dicey situations many would run away from. She’s brave. She’s strong. She’s noble. And she won’t stop until she succeeds.

Whitford Hays…oh Whit, Whit, Whit…what a rascal you are. Where he is a swashbuckling enigma in the first book, we get to see some deeper layers to the secretive genteel in this second book, and ladies, he’s far from perfect. He makes some big boo boos along the way, but in the end, the romance is as bombastic as we (and they) deserve.

I cannot recommend this series highly enough. The intrigue, the adventure, the tension…all of it is handled masterfully, and I’m not sure how I feel about it ending after only two books. Did it need more? No. But selfishly I want to linger far longer in this world. Luckily I own both books in multiple formats so I can revisit them literally whenever and whereever I want. #readergoals

Read it. Love it. Thank me later.

Details

Title:: Where the Library Hides (Secrets of the Nile #2)
Author:: Isabel Ibanez
Genre:: Historical Fantasy
Publisher:: Wednesday Books
Length:: 400 pages
Audio Length:: 14h 29m
Audiobook Narrator:: Ahmed Hamad and Ana Osorio
Published:: November 5th, 2024
The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars



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What the River Knows | Isabel Ibanez
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The Ministry of Time | Kaliane Bradley

Book Review:: Murder at Gulls Nest | Jess Kidd

A quaint coastal town. A missing person. A silent little girl who sees everything. A former nun who won’t let it go. Murder at Gulls Nest is a historical cozy mystery set just after the World Wars with suspects a-plenty, and secrets everywhere.

Murder at Gull's Nest by Jess Kidd Book Cover

I wanted to read this book in part because I don’t have much experience with what is colloquially referred to as a ‘cozy mystery’. I get it now. It’s essentially equivalent to an old episode of Murder She Wrote. It doesn’t mean that there is not death, or even gruesome things that happen or are described. It’s more of a slow methodical approach to solving a mystery by moving through each logical piece of the investigation. The absence of the ‘thrill’ element that makes a thriller. That’s what ‘they’ mean by low-stakes. The protagonist is not necessarily in direct line of danger. They just have a stake in finding out the answer to the mystery.

Our POV character is a nun who has left the cloister in order to track down her friend, also a former nun, whose letters have mysteriously stopped after implying in one of her letters that the people around her had everything to hide. Nora poses as an innocent guest in a board house with no knowledge of the place or agenda and tries to find out everything she can about the mysteriously missing woman who used to stay in the room there.

If she was trying to be subtle about her investigation, she failed. She wandered around that city asking direct questions that could only have raised red flags to someone trying to hide something. It was a full-fledged amateur investigation, but when a dead body turns up, the real authorities become involved as well.

While I enjoyed the story, I didn’t find myself very invested in the drama. There is plenty of mystery to go around, and I found a lot of the historical elements to be intriguing and interesting, but I didn’t feel engrossed. I think I would have enjoyed a more emotional experience. It almost reminded me of a Sherlock Holmes style novel, if that’s your thing. If you like finding clues and analyzing people, trying to crack the mystery before the characters, you’re going to love it.

I appreciate the opportunity to read this early reader’s copy from the publisher and netgalley, and I will be interested to read the next installment of this new mystery series by Jess Kidd.

Note:: I received an early copy of this book from the publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

Details

Title:: Murder at Gulls Nest (Nora Breen Investigates #1)
Author:: Jess Kidd
Genre:: Cozy Historical Mystery
Publisher:: Atria Books
Length:: 336 pages
Audio Length:: 9h 30m
Audiobook Narrator:: Siobhan McSweeney
Audiobook Publisher:: Simon & Schuster Audio
Published:: April 8th, 2025
The Litertarian Rating:: 4-Stars



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