This Is How You Lose the Time War
Your Memberships & Subscriptions
Book accolades
Hugo AwardWinner, 2020
Locus AwardWinner, 2020
Nebula AwardWinner, 2019
Book details
- Print length223 pages
Print length: 223 pages
Contains real page numbers based on the print edition (ISBN B0B621WC91). - LanguageEnglish
- Sticky notesOn Kindle Scribe
Sticky notes: On Kindle Scribe
On Kindle Scribe, you can add sticky notes to take handwritten notes in supported book formats. Learn more about Kindle Scribe. - PublisherS&S/Saga Press
- Publication dateJuly 16, 2019
- File size2223 KB
- Page FlipEnabled
Page Flip: Enabled
Page Flip is a new way to explore your books without losing your place. Learn More - Word WiseEnabled
Word Wise: Enabled
Word Wise helps you read harder books by explaining the most challenging words in the book. Learn More - Enhanced typesettingEnabled
Enhanced typesetting: Enabled
Enhanced typesetting improvements offer faster reading with less eye strain and beautiful page layouts, even at larger font sizes. Learn More
Book overview
“[An] exquisitely crafted tale...Part epistolary romance, part mind-blowing science fiction adventure, this dazzling story unfolds bit by bit, revealing layers of meaning as it plays with cause and effect, wildly imaginative technologies, and increasingly intricate wordplay...This short novel warrants multiple readings to fully unlock its complexities.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
From award-winning authors Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone comes an enthralling, romantic novel spanning time and space about two time-traveling rivals who fall in love and must change the past to ensure their future.
Among the ashes of a dying world, an agent of the Commandment finds a letter. It reads: Burn before reading.
Thus begins an unlikely correspondence between two rival agents hellbent on securing the best possible future for their warring factions. Now, what began as a taunt, a battlefield boast, becomes something more. Something epic. Something romantic. Something that could change the past and the future.
Except the discovery of their bond would mean the death of each of them. There’s still a war going on, after all. And someone has to win. That’s how war works, right?
Cowritten by two beloved and award-winning sci-fi writers, This Is How You Lose the Time War is an epic love story spanning time and space.
Review
"If Iain M. Banks and Gerard Manley Hopkins had ever been able to collaborate on a science fiction project, well, it wouldn’t be half as much fun as this novella. There is all the pleasure of a long series, and all the details of a much larger world, presented in miniature here.” (Kelly Link )
"This book has it all: treachery and love, lyricism and gritty action, existential crisis and space-opera scope, not to mention time traveling superagents. Gladstone's and El-Mohtar's debut collaboration is a fireworks display from two very talented storytellers." (Madeline Miller, Winner of the Orange Prize for Fiction )
“Seditious and seductive, lush and lustrous, allusive and elusive, THIS IS HOW YOU LOSE THE TIME WAR is one of those rare stories where one struggles to decide whether to heap more praise upon its clever structure and prose or its brilliant ideas and characters. Never mind ... sit back and let it wind its way into your mind, until, with a start, you realize that you no longer know where the story ends and you start.” (Ken Liu author of The Grace of Kings and The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories )
“Lyrical and vivid and bittersweet. An absolutely lovely read from two talented writers.” (Ann Leckie, Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author of Ancillary Justice )
“An intimate and lyrical tour of time, myth and history, with a captivating conversation between characters—and authors. Read it.” (New York Times bestselling author John Scalzi )
"This Is How You Lose the Time War is rich and strange, a romantic tour through all of time and the multiverse, and you shouldn’t miss a moment.” (Martha Wells, Hugo Award-winning author of The Murderbot Diaries )
“A time travel adventure that has as much humanity, grace, and love as it has temporal shenanigans, rewriting history, and temporal agents fighting to the death. Two days from now, you've already devoured it.” (Ryan North, New York Times Bestselling and Eisner Award winning author of How To Invent Everything: A Survival Guide For The Stranded Time Traveler )
“Poetry, disguised as genre fiction. I read several sections out loud — this is prose that wants to be more than read. It wants to be heard and tasted.” (Kelly Sue DeConnick, author of Captain Marvel )
"A twisting, sapphic time travel fantasy love story that never stops surprising: El-Mohtar and Gladstone have written the ultimate in enemies-to-lovers romance.” (Booklist, Starred Review)
“Seditious and seductive, lush and lustrous, allusive and elusive, THIS IS HOW YOU LOSE THE TIME WAR is one of those rare stories where one struggles to decide whether to heap more praise upon its clever structure and prose or its brilliant ideas and characters.”
—Ken Liu, author of The Grace of Kings and The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories
Tenderness, danger, daring, wit — Time War has them all... In other words, these pages are strewn with myriad delights. (Nisi Shawl )
About the Author
Max Gladstone is the author of the Hugo-nominated Craft Sequence, which Patrick Rothfuss called “stupefyingly good.” The sixth book, Ruin of Angels, was released September 2017. Max’s interactive mobile game Choice of the Deathless was nominated for the XYZZY Award, and his critically acclaimed short fiction has appeared on Tor.com and in Uncanny Magazine, and in anthologies such as XO Orpheus: Fifty New Myths and The Starlit Wood: New Fairy Tales. John Crowley described Max as “a true star of 21st-century fantasy.” Max has sung in Carnegie Hall and was once thrown from a horse in Mongolia.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!
A little joke. Trust that I have accounted for all variables of irony. Though I suppose if you’re unfamiliar with overanthologized works of the early Strand 6 nineteenth century, the joke’s on me.
I hoped you’d come.
You’re wondering what this is—but not, I think, wondering who this is. You know—just as I’ve known, since our eyes met during that messy matter on Abrogast-882—that we have unfinished business.
I shall confess to you here that I’d been growing complacent. Bored, even, with the war; your Agency’s flash and dash upthread and down, Garden’s patient planting and pruning of strands, burrowing into time’s braid. Your unstoppable force to our immovable object; less a game of Go than a game of tic-tac-toe, outcomes determined from the first move, endlessly iterated until the split where we fork off into unstable, chaotic possibility—the future we seek to secure at each other’s expense.
But then you turned up.
My margins vanished. Every move I’d made by rote I had to bring myself to fully. You brought some depth to your side’s speed, some staying power, and I found myself working at capacity again. You invigorated your Shift’s war effort and, in so doing, invigorated me.
Please find my gratitude all around you.
I must tell you it gives me great pleasure to think of you reading these words in licks and whorls of flame, your eyes unable to work backwards, unable to keep the letters on a page; instead you must absorb them, admit them into your memory. In order to recall them you must seek my presence in your thoughts, tangled among them like sunlight in water. In order to report my words to your superiors you must admit yourself already infiltrated, another casualty of this most unfortunate day.
This is how we’ll win.
It is not entirely my intent to brag. I wish you to know that I respected your tactics. The elegance of your work makes this war seem like less of a waste. Speaking of which, the hydraulics in your spherical flanking gambit were truly superb. I hope you’ll take comfort from the knowledge that they’ll be thoroughly digested by our mulchers, such that our next victory against your side will have a little piece of you in it.
Better luck next time, then.
Fondly,
Blue
Get to know this book
What's it about?
Two rival agents in a war across time fall in love through letters, risking everything to change the past and shape the future.Amazon editors say...

This slim, emotionally riveting tale of love and loyalty packs a wallop more potent than that of books three times its size.
Adrian Liang, Amazon Editor
Popular highlight
But when I think of you, I want to be alone together. I want to strive against and for. I want to live in contact. I want to be a context for you, and you for me. I love you, and I love you, and I want to find out what that means together.3,982 Kindle readers highlighted this
Popular highlight
Words can wound—but they’re bridges, too. (Like the bridges that are all that Genghis left behind.) Though maybe a bridge can also be a wound? To paraphrase a prophet: Letters are structures, not events. Yours give me a place to live inside.1,739 Kindle readers highlighted this
From the Publisher
Product Details
- ASIN: B07MNG496J
- Publisher: S&S/Saga Press; Reprint edition (July 16, 2019)
- Publication date: July 16, 2019
- Language: English
- File size: 2223 KB
- Text-to-Speech: Enabled
- Screen Reader: Supported
- Enhanced typesetting: Enabled
- X-Ray: Enabled
- Word Wise: Enabled
- Sticky notes: On Kindle Scribe
- Print length: 223 pages
-
Amazon.com Sales Rank#10,473 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
About the authors
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.Amal El-Mohtar is an award-winning author and critic: her short fiction has won the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, while her poetry has won the Rhysling award three times. She is the author of THE HONEY MONTH, a collection of poetry and prose written to the taste of twenty-eight different kinds of honey, and writes the OTHERWORLDLY column for the New York Times Book Review. She's the co-author, with Max Gladstone, of THIS IS HOW YOU LOSE THE TIME WAR, an epistolary time-travelling spy vs spy novella. Find her online at amalelmohtar.com, or on Twitter @tithenai.
MAX GLADSTONE is a fencer, a fiddler, and Hugo Award Finalist. He has taught English in China, wrecked a bicycle in Angkor Wat, and been thrown from a horse in Mongolia. Max lives and writes in Somerville, Massachusetts, near Boston. He is the author of the Craft Sequence (Three Parts Dead, Two Serpents Rise, Full Fathom Five, Last First Snow, Four Roads Cross, and Ruin of Angels).
You might also like
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
Videos
For this product

0:41

This Is How You Lose the Time War
Amazon Videos
4 stars and above
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
You might also like
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  
Customers say
Customers find the book intriguing, original, and fascinating. They also describe the setting as fascinating and remarkably dense. Readers praise the writing style as beautiful, snarky, and sweet. They describe the romance plot as brilliant, bittersweet, and imaginative. Opinions are mixed on the difficulty level, characters, and entertainment value. Some find the writing beautiful and easy to recommend, while others say it seems intentionally difficult.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the writing style lush, creative, and well-crafted. They also describe the book as a unique and beautiful take on the concept of time travel. Readers also mention that the title is intriguing and the transportive quality of letters endures. They say the book is snarky, quick to read, and glittering.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...💙Some words I might use to describe this story: captivating, poetic, sapphic, fantastical, bittersweet, romantic, imaginative, and heart-..." Read more
"...The paper can vary. Same with the ink. But the transportive quality of letters endures. I only wish we wrote more of them in our current “strand.”" Read more
"...And the romance! I can't overstate how great it feels. It's playful, it's teasing, it's as rich as a triple chocolate cookie, and it's thrilling...." Read more
"...The language used is carefully chosen so as to give the reader a general image of the setting, allowing the reader to fill the gaps...." Read more
Customers find the book wonderful, satisfying, and beautifully written. They also say it's fresh, original, and worth the trouble. Readers also mention that the book is compact and can be read in a day.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...I might use to describe this story: captivating, poetic, sapphic, fantastical, bittersweet, romantic, imaginative, and heart-wrenching...." Read more
"...I will say, for a relatively short 200 page novella, this book is remarkably dense and intense...." Read more
"It was... fine?While this was unarguably a beautifully written book, it wasn't a compelling and interesting one, at least not to me...." Read more
"...To the contrary, it's a superbly written, well crafted piece of storytelling. It's just not my cup of tea." Read more
Customers find the romance plot brilliant, heart-rendingly passionate, and beautiful. They also recommend the book for sci-fi and romance fans.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...to describe this story: captivating, poetic, sapphic, fantastical, bittersweet, romantic, imaginative, and heart-wrenching.❤️💙“..." Read more
"...It’s a fascinating tale.The prose borders on poetry—mostly to the good, although I occasionally had trouble following the action...." Read more
"...The result is a surprisingly compelling tale of two people connecting across (literally) time and space, slowly evolving in their understanding of..." Read more
"...Enemies to lovers; poetic, BEAUTIFUL writing; story told via letters, time war (obviously), alien species/cultures... So, so good. Just buy it." Read more
Customers find the book intriguing, unique, and rich. They also describe the world as unnerving, fantastic, and ephemeral.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...💙Some words I might use to describe this story: captivating, poetic, sapphic, fantastical, bittersweet, romantic, imaginative, and heart-..." Read more
"...tool splashed against a sci-fi/fantastical backdrop that is decidedly captivating." Read more
"...; while it occasionally veers into the overly poetic/angsty, it's too interesting and imaginative for me not to find myself drawn in, and the way it..." Read more
"...So, it is obviously super unique, and it was, in fact, unlike anything I’ve ever read in my life...." Read more
Customers find the setting fascinating, timeless, and alternating timelines. They also mention the prose is sapphic and timeless.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...It’s a story of time travel, and divisive ideals, and friendship, and humor, and most of all, love…how love really might be worth losing everything..." Read more
"...Their struggle is the next thing to endless. Both are essentially immortal, capable of playing the longest of long games in one “strand”..." Read more
"...Flaws aside, this book is lyrical in its prose, poetic and timeless with it's theme of needing to be connected to someone, to not be alone;..." Read more
"...a sucker for a romance between opposing sides, and the time & space aspects were intriguing...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the entertainment value of the book. Some find it highly enjoyable, passionate, and heart-wrenching, while others say it's beautifully written but not compelling or interesting.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...While this was unarguably a beautifully written book, it wasn't a compelling and interesting one, at least not to me...." Read more
"...And the romance! I can't overstate how great it feels. It's playful, it's teasing, it's as rich as a triple chocolate cookie, and it's thrilling...." Read more
"...It is really not very good. I have no idea why some have given such praise to this book, it really is not deserving of any attention." Read more
"...get more and more intimate as the book goes on was really, really enthralling...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the characters in the book. Some like the premise and amazing characterization, while others say there's not enough about them.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"...❤️It is wordy, perhaps even pretentious, but it fit the characters so well, and the English major (and lover) in me appreciated the hell out..." Read more
"...That the characters weren’t more developed. The end wasn’t my favorite because it was once again a mess...." Read more
"...Persistent foreshadowing. And memorable, mysterious, and mischievous characters. For this is an unlikely story (are not those always the best?)..." Read more
"...The imagery is lush and invocative and tantalizing; the focal characters thought-provoking...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the difficulty level. Some find the book confusing, complex, and fun, while others say the writing is intentionally difficult, incoherent, and convoluted.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
"Moving and profound but also Confusing and clunky at times. Definitely a book you need to read twice. Im glad I stuck with it, it was beautiful" Read more
"...It is beautifully written, lyrical and confusing and delightful. I don't think I've ever read anything so odd but not at all offputting...." Read more
"...But it was definitely not for me. For such a short book, it took forever to slog through. Points for uniqueness, though...." Read more
"...Very well written however just took to long to put everything together...." Read more
Reviews with images











See More
Submit a report
- Harassment, profanity
- Spam, advertisement, promotions
- Given in exchange for cash, discounts
Sorry, there was an error
Please try again later.Top reviews from the United States
❤️
This book left me speechless. I’m still not sure how to compose a true review, because my review will be worlds below the skill and beauty that Gladstone and El-Mohtar were able to weave together in their beautiful love story.
💙
Red and Blue stole my heart and carved a piece of themselves into my soul. This book comes in at just under 200 pages (198 to be exact), but the impact on me was no less than that of an epic fantasy.
❤️
It is wordy, perhaps even pretentious, but it fit the characters so well, and the English major (and lover) in me appreciated the hell out of this text. It’s a story of time travel, and divisive ideals, and friendship, and humor, and most of all, love…how love really might be worth losing everything else for.
💙
Some words I might use to describe this story: captivating, poetic, sapphic, fantastical, bittersweet, romantic, imaginative, and heart-wrenching.
❤️💙
“And what I return to, the me-ness that I know as pure, inescapable self…is hunger. Desire. Longing, this longing to posses, to become, to break like a wave on a rock and reform, and break again, and wash away.”
❤️
“Always a balancing act, of course, to give without losing, to support without weakening. Everything a weaving.”
💙
“But when I think of you, I want to be alone together. I want to strive against and for. I want to live in contact. I want to be a context for you, and you for me. I love you, and I love you, and I want to find out what that means together.”
❤️💙
They are also, at various points, tree rings, magma, and bubbles. (Seal guts are involved at one point too.)
This epistolary novella begins as a contest between two time travelers, the preeminent members of competing organizations bent on shaping the multiverse to fit their respective visions. Red works for the Agency, a technologically advanced version of humanity that’s implanted her with weapons and armor and pseudo-skin that can change form as required. Blue works for Garden, an organic hivemind whose members have evolved natural corollaries to these tools of destruction and deception. When deployed against each other, Red and Blue are “equal and opposite reaction[s],” as Blue terms them at one point, “a microcosm … of the war as a whole.”
Their struggle is the next thing to endless. Both are essentially immortal, capable of playing the longest of long games in one “strand” (i.e., potential timeline) after another. They might live out an entire life advising a variation of Genghis Khan, for example, and then skip to a resulting future to alter the outcome of a space battle, before circling back to a connecting past to ensure that the wind in an underground labyrinth “whistles over the right fluted bones,” so that “one pilgrim will hear the cry as an omen that will drive him to renounce all worldly goods and retreat to build a hermitage on a distant mountain slope, so that hermitage will exist in two hundred years to shelter a woman fleeing with child in a storm, and so it goes.” Sometimes these actions seem noble, like immunizing Native Americans centuries before contact with Europeans. But in other missions Red and Blue massacre millions.
And it wears. Early in the time war, it was probably easy for these adversaries to shrug off the psychic toll levied by their work—why bother with morality when there are multitudes, when London has so many incarnations they’re labeled with numbers and letters? Yet after eons of plotting and maneuvering and killing, the war goes on, and Red and Blue have little to show for their service.
Except their rivalry.
One-upping each other becomes a new challenge. Not just in the field—although they do plenty of showing off there too (subtle and otherwise). But after Blue rubs in a victory by sending Red a letter that can only be read by burning it, Red responds with a message that can only be read by boiling. From there, they concoct increasingly elaborate ways to continue their correspondence. In the process, their relationship changes, morphing from competition to curiosity to … something more.
It’s a fascinating tale.
The prose borders on poetry—mostly to the good, although I occasionally had trouble following the action. And I’m not sure all the time travel mechanics add up. (If Red and Blue can pinpoint their communications to the exact time and place the other will receive them, how have their parent organizations not figured out when and where to assassinate each other’s agents?) But I loved the ways El-Mohtar and Gladstone play with the concept of letters. “There’s a kind of time travel in letters, isn’t there?” muses Red at one point—words you can reread to take you back to a specific moment, no matter how long it’s been since you first read them.
The paper can vary. Same with the ink. But the transportive quality of letters endures. I only wish we wrote more of them in our current “strand.”
I will say, for a relatively short 200 page novella, this book is remarkably dense and intense. It is a back-and-forth between two warriors of warring factions in a time war. The time war itself is both rather obvious in nature (they travel to different times and places and influence events) and incredibly dense, with interweaving timelines that form and melt based on the actions of the protagonists. I would say that if you are looking for a book that deep dives into finer details of the worldbuilding and time travel system, this isn't the kind of book for you.
Instead, the worldbuilding serves as a fascinating tapestry upon which the narrative unfolds. The authors, in my opinion, leave wide room for interpretation, and I found that to be so refreshing for a sci-fi book. I suppose that was a necessity, based on the length of the novella, but it was an excellent one, because it allows so much of the story to revolve around the romance between the characters.
And the romance! I can't overstate how great it feels. It's playful, it's teasing, it's as rich as a triple chocolate cookie, and it's thrilling. It felt so lively, I could have seriously guessed that the authors were dating each other (which was not the case, as the afterword mentions, both are married to other people). And the fact that it was a Sapphic romance was perhaps the most delightful part. I'm so used to Sapphic romance being rather plain, or falling into several tropes, but the setting really forced the authors to expand beyond those tropes. And what a delight that was! I would not only recommend this book to lovers of LGBT romances, but to anyone who loves a great romantic tale. It's too good to pass up!
While this was unarguably a beautifully written book, it wasn't a compelling and interesting one, at least not to me.
I loved, really loved, the whole idea of the love story growing through letters, whenever I got to one I got excited but as soon as it got back to the "current time" (interesting choice of wording everything considered - iykyk) I got bored.
To me, I believe, the main issue as to why I didn't really connect with the story, was due to the lack of context.
Prior to reading the novel, I had read a few reviews stating that it was a frustrating novel for the reader because you wouldn't fully understand what was going on, and while that is an interesting, and likely conscious one, it didn't work for me.
It felt as though you didn't get enough context to be invested in the actual plot, world, and whole concept of the character's lives. The same applies to the love story.
To me, it seemed as though the book couldn't decide whether the driving force of the story was the world in which it was set or the love story that it was trying to narrate. Possibly both.
It was, by no means, a bad book - it just wasn't for me.
I appreciated the writing, very much so, and it most definitely had some beautiful moments.
Ultimately though, it just fell a little flat for me.
As for the events themselves and how the plot unfolds, this does lean more towards traditional epistolary. We, the reader, grow increasingly more excited for each letter. The in between moments give us brief insight into the reactions of Red and Blue. In the beginning we see them at odds, a potential victory foiled and then followed by a letter. But what starts off as two enemies enjoying the game of war becomes something more than either of them could possibly have anticipated.
I highly recommend this novel to those who love shorter novels that pack a punch (and especially for those who are not as interested in the endless contemporary novels of today that have mulled over the same themes without much deviation) as well as to those who used to read longer novels and miss the fantastical escapism of those worlds. I think you'll find this novel satiates the desire for a story to explore the nature of relationships with a focus on the various forms of communication as the guiding tool splashed against a sci-fi/fantastical backdrop that is decidedly captivating.
Enemies to lovers; poetic, BEAUTIFUL writing; story told via letters, time war (obviously), alien species/cultures... So, so good. Just buy it.
Each letter gives you something to chew on, reread, and think about. The story is lovely and had me smiling almost the whole time.
Top reviews from other countries
Don't read anything about the book, just dive in it.
These words are needed to post my very useful review, so here they are.
How customer reviews and ratings work
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon




