Publisher's Hardcover ©2021 | -- |
Amnesia. Fiction.
Time travel. Fiction.
Great Britain. History. 19th century. Fiction.
Napoleon conquered England in this time-travel/alt-history fantasy set at the turns of the 19th and 20th centuries.When Joe Tournier steps off a train from Glasgow in Londres in 1898, he can remember his name but very little else. He's suffering from "silent epilepsy," a doctor tells him, which is characterized not by the usual convulsions but by symptoms associated with epileptic auras: amnesia, paramnesia, visions. Paramnesia is "the blurring of something imaginary and something real," explains the doctor, giving what might work equally well as a definition of fiction, particularly of Pulley's favored fantasy genre. In the time-travel subgenre, of course, there are better explanations than epilepsy for déjà vu ("the sense you've seen something new before") and its opposite, jamais vu ("when something that should be familiar feels wholly alien"). Joe's master retrieves him from the hospital-like most people of English descent under the reign of Napoleon IV, Joe is enslaved-and takes him home to Joe's wife, who is not the same woman as Madeline, the wife Joe believes he remembers. A postcard delivered almost a century after it's mailed sends Joe north to the Outer Hebrides on a quest to learn about his forgotten past and perhaps find Madeline. There, he passes through a time portal into the middle of the Napoleonic War at a point when victory hangs in the balance-and when previous temporal crossings have already made that balance wobble and spin. Missouri Kite, an officer in the Royal Navy, and his sister and ship's surgeon, Agatha Castlereagh, hope to use information and technology from the future to win the war for the British. Is it too late to change history? Can Joe help Kite and Agatha without changing the future so much that he endangers the toddler daughter he left behind in 1900-or indeed, his own existence? As scenes spiral back and forth between centuries, the book's emotional center crystallizes around a fundamental mystery: Who, in fact, is Joe? All time-travel plots are fraught with paradox, but not all rise to Pulley's level of tricky cleverness, and few of those trickily clever books rise to her level of emotional intensity.Suspenseful, philosophical, and inventive, this sparkling novel explores the power of memory and love.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)Napoleon conquered England in this time-travel/alt-history fantasy set at the turns of the 19th and 20th centuries.When Joe Tournier steps off a train from Glasgow in Londres in 1898, he can remember his name but very little else. He's suffering from "silent epilepsy," a doctor tells him, which is characterized not by the usual convulsions but by symptoms associated with epileptic auras: amnesia, paramnesia, visions. Paramnesia is "the blurring of something imaginary and something real," explains the doctor, giving what might work equally well as a definition of fiction, particularly of Pulley's favored fantasy genre. In the time-travel subgenre, of course, there are better explanations than epilepsy for déjà vu ("the sense you've seen something new before") and its opposite, jamais vu ("when something that should be familiar feels wholly alien"). Joe's master retrieves him from the hospital-like most people of English descent under the reign of Napoleon IV, Joe is enslaved-and takes him home to Joe's wife, who is not the same woman as Madeline, the wife Joe believes he remembers. A postcard delivered almost a century after it's mailed sends Joe north to the Outer Hebrides on a quest to learn about his forgotten past and perhaps find Madeline. There, he passes through a time portal into the middle of the Napoleonic War at a point when victory hangs in the balance-and when previous temporal crossings have already made that balance wobble and spin. Missouri Kite, an officer in the Royal Navy, and his sister and ship's surgeon, Agatha Castlereagh, hope to use information and technology from the future to win the war for the British. Is it too late to change history? Can Joe help Kite and Agatha without changing the future so much that he endangers the toddler daughter he left behind in 1900-or indeed, his own existence? As scenes spiral back and forth between centuries, the book's emotional center crystallizes around a fundamental mystery: Who, in fact, is Joe? All time-travel plots are fraught with paradox, but not all rise to Pulley's level of tricky cleverness, and few of those trickily clever books rise to her level of emotional intensity.Suspenseful, philosophical, and inventive, this sparkling novel explores the power of memory and love.
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Pulley-s latest genre-bending feat (after
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
For fans of The 7 ½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle and David Mitchell, a genre bending, time twisting alternative history that asks whether it's worth changing the past to save the future, even if it costs you everyone you've ever loved. Joe Tournier has a bad case of amnesia. His first memory is of stepping off a train in the nineteenth-century French colony of England. The only clue Joe has about his identity is a century-old postcard of a Scottish lighthouse that arrives in London the same month he does. Written in illegal English--instead of French--the postcard is signed only with the letter "M," but Joe is certain whoever wrote it knows him far better than he currently knows himself, and he's determined to find the writer. The search for M, though, will drive Joe from French-ruled London to rebel-owned Scotland and finally onto the battle ships of a lost empire's Royal Navy. Swept out to sea with a hardened British sea captain named Kite, who might know more about Joe's past than he's willing to let on, Joe will remake history, and himself. From bestselling author Natasha Pulley, The Kingdoms is an epic, romantic, wildly original novel that bends genre as easily as it twists time.