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The Master of Time
The Master of Time
Oct 22, 2024 6:20 PM

Author:David Wingrove

The Master of Time

Part Three of The Roads to Moscow

The war for time is reaching its end

As the German and Russian forces seek to destroy a third, seemingly unstoppable faction, Otto Behr reluctantly finds himself at the centre of all timelines, his very existence the catalyst by which reality itself will be reset or destroyed.

But for Otto, the battle to become the Master of Time has become a fight for family, love and reality itself...

Reviews

Masterful and beautifully written. Riveting and compellingly authentic. Grips you like a vice from the first page and never lets you go

—— Damien Lewis

England's prose has the tough, spare elegance of steel scaffolding. His vocabulary is wide, and used with arresting precision. The speed of the narrative is impeccably controlled – long slogs over country, moments of blind panic, passages of demoralizing inactivity, hair-raising evasions, all building up to a central set-piece in a burning field... A brilliant achievement

—— The Times

Shocked through with dramatic tension

—— Irish Times

Outstanding … I doubt if there has been a more impressive debut since William Golding’s

—— Daily Telegraph

[Nick] Stone is a deceptively complex action hero who does as good a job as many a newspaper columnist in guiding us through the new global politics.

—— Mail on Sunday

Ticking like a time-bomb, Andy McNab's latest Nick Stone adventure is full of suspense.

—— Express & Star Wolverhampton

It's a blast.

—— Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Glittering characterisation, sharp and eloquent writing.

—— Sunday Telegraph

An important 20th-century writer who paints a complex relationship between gender and power with wit and sensitivity.

—— Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse

Lush and lyrical - and darkly funny even at its most gut-punching - Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy manages to simultaneously be a sweeping panorama of a Europe in crisis and a discomfitingly intimate portrait of a no-less-broken marriage.

—— Tara Isabella Burton, author of Social Creature

An addictive, gripping literary saga ... A sharp portrait of a young marriage under pressure and a vivid picture of being a Brit in an increasingly hostile and impoverished corner of Europe.

—— The Times

Olivia Manning takes autobiographical writing to a refreshingly new dimension. In The Balkan Trilogy she follows the well-worn mantra that authors should write about what they know, but she does so without sounding self-centred, a quality that so often dogs memoirs. Her's reads like wholly invented fiction with made-up, yet believable characters. It has been such a joy to re-read Manning's Trilogy...Manning's characterisation throughout the Trilogy is excellent. Her most astute depiction of a person in genuine inner conflict with himself is Guy Pringle...The author's depiction of Bucharest and the places Harriet and Guy visit are bold and colourful.

—— Bookmunch

A twisting murder mystery combined with a chillingly plausible alternative history of a divided Cold War London. Brilliant

—— Mason Cross, Richard and Judy bestselling author of The Samaritan

Rubin constructs a tantalising alternative world with 1950s Britain riven apart by its own version of the Berlin Wall - and all because the D-Day landings failed. Against this dystopian nightmare, the author overlays a murder mystery that's sure to appeal to fans of SS-GB, The Man in the High Castle, and Fatherland

—— David Young, CWA Dagger-winning author of Stasi Child

A gripping murder mystery set in an alternative 1950s Britain. Rubin's London, split between American and Soviet zones after a disastrous World War Two, is vividly realised and his story is elegantly constructed. One not to miss

—— William Ryan, author of The Constant Soldier

In the great tradition of SS-GB and Fatherland, Rubin's alternative-1950s murder mystery takes an ingenious premise - the Americans and the Soviets have carved up Britain between them after rescuing the country from the Nazis - and makes it come alive through sheer storytelling skill

—— Jake Kerridge

Strange and haunting.

—— Robert Collins , Prospect

Arguably his best…. A must-read

—— Victoria Moore , Daily Mail

Stunningly simple and profound.

—— Will Gore , Catholic Herald

The strength of this masterly novel is that it illuminates without pretending to explicate.

—— Ronan Farren , Belfast Telegraph Morning

It’s signature Amis at his most inventive, and it is through…inspired and irreverent fluency that his dead-serious purpose is realized.

—— Tova Reich , Washington Post

Most fiction would break under the weight of so much self-reflection, but The Zone of Interest does not even bend... Deft, ironic and horribly funny... A brilliantly believable account of an episode which is beyond belief.

—— Frances Wilson , Oldie

The Zone of Interest succeeds because in it Amis is seriously funny - that is to say, funny for serious purposes.

—— Ben Cooke , Cherwell Newspaper

Martin Amis’s best novel in years

—— Ian Rankin , Guardian

It’s a brilliant feat of imagination and chutzpah.

—— Viv Groskop , Observer

Is the Holocaust a fit subject for fiction? … The only proper response is to read this remarkable, deeply disturbing and quite original novel.

—— Alan Taylor , Herald

Martin Amis’s The Zone of Interest achieved the near impossible, confounding his detractors with this horrifying glimpse into the heard of Nazi darkness.

—— Bert Wright , Irish Times

The Zone of Interest is Amis at his boldest and best.

—— Allan Massie , Scotsman

What would be otherwise be light entertainment…becomes sinister and strange, warped by the enormous atrocities happening just offstage.

—— Lev Grossman and Radhika Jones , Time Magazine

Martin Amis’s best novel in years.

—— Ian Rankin , Guardian Weekly

It is always hard to read factual material about the Holocaust but in fiction Amis has shined a light into this darkness which offers no answers but is still profoundly moving.

—— Richard Jaffa , Birmingham Jewish Recorder

It was very, very good.

—— Joseph Connolly , Lady

I think everyone should read it – it is so horrific.

—— Kirsty Wark , Lady

A well-received return to form

—— Charlotte Heathcote , Daily Express

Astonishingly bold novel… [It] is Amis’s best work in years

—— Mail on Sunday

Amis’s best work since Money

—— Richard Susskind , The Times
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