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View Full Version : Audrey Niffenegger - The Time Traveler's Wife


Kell
9th November 2005, 21:22
Author: Audrey Niffenegger
ISBN # 0099464462
Publisher: Vintage
1st Published: 2003

Clare met Henry when she was 6 & Henry was 36. They were married when Clare was 22 & Henry was 30. In essence, the pair met before they met – seemingly impossible, but made reality because Henry is unique. He suffers from Chrono-impairment, a genetic anomaly which makes staying in the present incredibly difficult & Henry finds himself randomly dragged into the past or future where he discovers that you can’t change the future because, like the past, it has already happened. What unfolds is a love story that transcends time & leaves Clare playing a waiting game which starts when she is only a little girl & lasts throughout her adult life.

Before picking up this book, I really thought that the highly unusual premise would make the storyline feel fragmented, that the jumping back & forth through time would cause confusion, but I was pleasantly surprised at how the smooth storytelling style carried me the right way & I never once felt lost in the folds of time. This was also aided by the headings strategically placed (“Clare is 17 & Henry is 41” along with the appropriate date).

The duality of the plot made for interesting reading, letting me see the story first from the perspective of Henry & then of Clare at different points in time as they eventually all pulled together, each struggling to make sense of their meetings till the other is able to fill in the holes at a later date. It gave the whole thing a curious sense of longing as I, like the characters, had to wait to get the answers I wanted.

Within the ebb & flow of their lives, Niffenegger have cleverly woven many contrasts together & it is at once engaging, inviting & warm, yet it never shies away from harsh reality. While showing a grim sense of inevitability, the reader is also given hope with the adage that all is cyclical. The consequences of time travel, along with the ethics of the traveler, are all brought to the fore – are events caused because Henry tells Clare about them, are they self-fulfilling prophesies, or would they have happened anyway? How much should he give away about their future lives? Who, if anyone, does he tell of such a condition, & who in their right minds would believe him if he did? What are the genetic implications in the possibility of children? And what happens to the people left behind, waiting for his return?

I found myself deeply moved by this classic tale of star-crossed lovers given a brand new twist, saddened when the characters suffered, & uplifted during their joyful times. It really reached into my chest & twanged the heartstrings till I was nearly in tears near the end of the book. A heartwarming read & a fascinating study in how time travel affects both family & friends.

Maureen
21st November 2005, 20:21
The cover of this book, intrigued my other half enough for him to ask me what this book is about! Him that couldn't care less about books! Him that does not even read the instructions on a packet of soup! :upsidedown:

Maureen
8th December 2005, 20:50
Have to add that this was a fantastically good read in my opinion!

Inanna
2nd February 2006, 14:06
This one is on its way to me now :D

Maureen
2nd February 2006, 14:19
This one is on its way to me now :D

You're in for a good time!

Inanna
2nd February 2006, 18:22
Thats good to hear :mrgreen:

Sassenach
5th February 2006, 21:42
It's one of my all time favourite books.

crystall_child
14th July 2006, 06:36
I really loved this book and thought it was exceptionally well written as it would have been so easy to lose the plot with such a complicated and fragmented use of time, but it always remained completely believable. Only nearly in tears Kell? You did better than me then! :oops:

Kell
14th July 2006, 08:44
OK, maybe a stray tear escaped... LOL!

Inver
21st July 2006, 18:32
I loved it once I got past trying to keep track of how old he was etc. The story kept me interested and page turning.

Louiseog
21st July 2006, 19:05
It's one of my all time favourite books.
and me, loved it

madcow
20th September 2006, 14:38
I've just started reading this (about a third of the way through) and really enjoying it. Before joining the forum i'll admit that i wouldn't even have given this book a second glance, but now my horizons are broadening i am so glad i decided to give it a go.

Maureen
20th September 2006, 15:09
madcow, you won't be sorry!

madcow
20th September 2006, 15:18
thanks Maureen, i'm not so far.

Janet
21st September 2006, 09:19
I read this whilst on holiday last August - lying on a sunlounger by a pool, with all-inclusive beer to wash it down with. A perfect book for a perfect time! :D

prospero
20th March 2008, 14:16
More threadomancy from me. :blush: What? Well you all shouldn't read so many books and set up a site in their honour, shouldn't you? ;)

*ahem*

I may have a reputation as an acid-tongued, cold-hearted beeatch, so to go some way towards disproving that, I had to do a search for this book and say just one thing:

It has the best closing line of any book I've ever read.

Bar none.

Yes, even Gone With the Wind which is my favourite book (I think my best-loved would have been Wally Lamb's I Know This Much is True but for the Hollywood ending).

That's how much I love it.

God knows how Niffenegger kept all those timelines straight in her own mind; they would have given me a migraine or five but after reading TTTW, I had that rare feeling of, "Damn. I wish I'd written that," which has only happened a handful of times since I learned to read.

Michelle
20th March 2008, 14:24
I don't have a problem at all with old threads being brought to life again. In fact, it's much better than starting a new one.. which means that we have to merge them. :)

prospero
20th March 2008, 14:27
It's not on my chunky challenge list (I love saying chunky challenge chunky challenge chunky challenge...) but I may read it again soon just to remind myself of how much I love it.

I'm kinda sorta not looking forward to the film as they're never as good as the books, but then again, Eric Bana's playing Henry, and you know me and my 'thing' for Aussies...

I think I'll wait for a re-read until I have my migraine medication drawer restocked. Trying to figure it out makes my head spin. But even through all that I know I love the book.

I must have a thing for time travel books because I adore Diana Gabaldon's novels as well - I've read books 1-5 in the Jamie and Claire series, some more than once.

Kell
20th March 2008, 17:13
God knows how Niffenegger kept all those timelines straight in her own mind; they would have given me a migraine or five but after reading TTTW, I had that rare feeling of, "Damn. I wish I'd written that," which has only happened a handful of times since I learned to read.
I think I remember reading an interview somewhere that said she'd kept two separate timelines - one for Claire and one for Henry - then checked back to see who knew what at each age. It must have been SO complicated to keep on top of all that!