13 March 2026
‘The Ministry of Time’ by Kaliane Bradley (which I've just finished reading as an unabridged audio book narrated by Katie Leung and George Weightman) is a very clever and engaging time travel story that contemplates what it would be like in practical reality to have travelled from a different time. It is set in London in the near future, when time travel has become a possibility. The Ministry has decided to experiment cautiously by bringing individuals from history through a time portal to the present day, carefully choosing people known from historical records to be about to die, so as to avoid any consequences for the timeline from their removal from the past. One of those chosen, Commander Graham Gore, was a sailor on the ill-fated Franklin expedition to discover the Northwest Passage in 1845 - the story of which was familiar to me from the 2018 TV series, 'The Terror', which told the remarkable story of the two ships Erebus and Terror trapped in the ice in the Arctic for several years. The bulk of Kaliane Bradley's book explores how Commander Gore and his fellow 'ex-pats' from different moments in history would cope assimilating into 21st century Britain with the help of their Bridges - individuals from the Ministry assigned to look after them and induct them into modern life. It's a fascinating and beautifully written description of what it might really be like to be placed out of time. Graham Gore's Bridge is the unnamed narrator, a young British Cambodian woman whose job is to introduce the 19th century sailor to modern technology and sensibilities. It's a beautifully drawn, funny and moving odd-couple romance, which kept my attention throughout. But I always felt there must be something more to the plot, expecting further twists resulting from the availability of time travel. And when these twists did arrive they were very effective, genuinely surprising me. But they came very late in the narrative, with the final chapters feeling like a sudden avalanche of exposition that was quite hard to take in. Nevertheless the Ministry of Time is a fascinating and unusual science fiction story exploring serious and adult themes with the time travellers acting as an analogy for immigration, integration and colonialism. It's a brilliant first novel by Bradley and I look forward to seeing what she writes next.