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Title: Doing Time (Time Police #1)
Author: Jodi Taylor
Genre: Sci-fi
Rating: 3.5/5
# pages: 464 pages
Date read: May, 2022

A long time ago in the future, the secret of time travel became known to all. Unsurprisingly, the world nearly ended. There will always be idiots who want to change history.

Enter the Time Police. An all-powerful, international organisation tasked with keeping the timeline straight. At all costs.

Their success is legendary. The Time Wars are over. But now they must fight to save a very different future - their own.

This is the story of Jane, Luke and Matthew - the worst recruits in Time Police history. Or, very possibly, three young people who might change everything.


I hadn't realized that this book/series took place in the same universe as the Chronicles of St. Mary's series, but fortunately it seemed to be enough to have read the first one - I just needed to know Max, Leon and what St. Mary's was all about!

I liked it. I really liked getting to know Jane, Luke and Matthew, and I very much enjoyed the ABSENSE of foreshadowing here (as that was what made me give up on the other series after just two books). It's the first book in a spin-off series, but nicely contained, so we'll see if I continue with the rest of the books, or just stick to this one.
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Title: A Symphony of Echoes (The Chronicles of St. Mary's #2)
Author: Jodi Taylor
Genre: Sci-fi
Rating: 3.5/5
# pages: 478
Date read: April, 2018

In the second book in the Chronicles of St Mary's series, Max and the team visit Victorian London in search of Jack the Ripper, withess the murder of Archbishop Thomas a Becket in Canterbury Cathedral, and discover that dodos make a grockling noise when eating cucumber sandwiches.


But they must also confront an enemy intent on destroying St Mary's - an enemy willing, if necessary, to destroy History itself to do it.


Not quite as good as the first one, but still an enjoyable read and I loved all the time travel - even if some of the visits seemed somewhat random (I loved their trip back to Nineveh, but never figured out what purpose it served to the main part of the story!) making it seem more like a collection of connected short stories than an actual novel.

I think I'll take a bit of a break from the series though. The incessant foreshadowing ("little did I know that 24 hours later I'd be ready to kill him", "it was a good plan, really! None of us knew what would happen" etc. etc. etc.) drove me batty, and though not enough to give up on the book itself, it's enough to put me off reading the next one just now.
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Title: Just One Damned Thing After Another (The Chronicles of St. Mary #1)
Author: Jodi Taylor
Genre: Sci-fi
Rating: 4.5/5
# pages: 334, Audiobook ~11hrs
Date read: March 2018, April 2022

Behind the seemingly innocuous façade of St Mary's, a different kind of historical research is taking place. They don't do 'time-travel' - they 'investigate major historical events in contemporary time'. Maintaining the appearance of harmless eccentrics is not always within their power - especially given their propensity for causing loud explosions when things get too quiet.

Meet the disaster-magnets of St Mary's Institute of Historical Research as they ricochet around History. Their aim is to observe and document - to try and find the answers to many of History's unanswered questions...and not to die in the process. But one wrong move and History will fight back - to the death. And, as they soon discover - it's not just History they're fighting.

Follow the catastrophe curve from 11th-century London to World War I, and from the Cretaceous Period to the destruction of the Great Library at Alexandria. For wherever Historians go, chaos is sure to follow in their wake....

4.5 stars. It lost the last half star because of all of the INCESSANT foreshadowing. It's one of my biggest pet peeves in literature. Fortunately in this case the foreshadowing usually happened just a few pages ahead of the event, so I could cope with it, but it still made me roll my eyes HARD every time. It is such a cheap trick, and I wish authors would rise above it.

Ahrem... *cough*... aaaaaanyway...

That minor nitpick aside I absolutely LOVED this book. I had begged for recommendations of good books on FB and this was one of the suggestions. It sounded intriguing and came cheap on amazon (and free on GR... but I didn't discover that until afterwards :-P ) and it absolutely delivered. It had me hooked from the very first chapter and fortunately the rest totally lived up to the promising beginning. Time-travel done well is one of my favourite genres, and when it is combined with historical fiction (much in the same way as Connie Willis) I'm totally sold.

The book had great characters, twists and turns galore, lots of lovely snark and a visit to the Cretaceous Period to boot - what's not to like?

As a book to get me out of my reading slump it was a total success, and kept me up till far too late in order to finish. Awesome :-D
goodreads: (Peanut: Book geek)
Title: Daughter of Smoke and Bone
Author: Laini Taylor
Genre: Paranormal
Rating: 2/5
# pages: 424
Date read: August, 2013

In general, Karou has managed to keep her two lives in balance. On the one hand, she's a seventeen-year-old art student in Prague; on the other, errand-girl to a monstrous creature who is the closest thing she has to family. Raised half in our world, half in 'Elsewhere', she has never understood Brimstone's dark work - buying teeth from hunters and murderers - nor how she came into his keeping. She is a secret even to herself, plagued by the sensation that she isn't whole.

Now the doors to Elsewhere are closing, and Karou must choose between the safety of her human life and the dangers of a war-ravaged world that may hold the answers she has always sought.

I had very high hopes for this book as it came extremely highly recommended, but unfortunately it couldn't deliver. Giving it two stars is being generous, as most of the time I didn't care for it at all. It had small glimpses here and there of something better, which kept me reading, but at the end of the day it only just made it to "Okay".

The biggest problems were that apparently I'm not into paranormal novels featuring angels, and I just didn't care for Madrigal and Akiva's backstory at all - in fact, those chapters actively bored me. I liked Karou well enough and LOVED Zuzana, but that wasn't enough to keep me engaged, and despite a ridiculous cliffhanger (word to the wise - this is more like the first half of a book than the first book in a series) I'm not going to bother with the rest of the series.

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