Another review that I’ve written for publication on Culturazzi Cognoscente Club. What follows is an excerpt:
“I met Clare for the first time in October, 1991. She met me for the first time in September, 1977; she was six, I will be thirty-eight. She’s known me all her life. In 1991 I’m just getting to know her.”
~ Henry DeTamble
Meet Henry DeTamble and Clare Abshire, who first met when Henry was 36 and Claire, 6. First dated when Henry was 28 and Claire 20, and got married when Henry was 30 and Claire,22.
Confusing? Yes, only for a while, but all things fall into place fairly quickly and soon you are swept away by Audrey Niffenegger’s writing, and the amazing love affair of Henry and Clare – one that you may have never read before.
The Time Traveler’s Wife is an original love story that transcends life’s barriers of time and death, and offers a fresh, realistic, and intimate insight into the complications that the space/time continuum theory, (if possible) bring to the already complex matters of love and marriage. Yes, this explains the title of the book. Henry deTamble suffers from a genetic disorder that causes him to time-travel involuntarily into the past and future. As a result, he becomes a reluctant time-traveler of sorts.
So far, the revelations about the theme of the book may make you mistake this for a sci-fi adventure novel. But it isn’t. At most, Henry’s time-traveling is only a backdrop to the real story.
At its heart, this book is about two people trying to make their relationship and marriage work, raising a family and staying together under extraordinary circumstances that are beyond their control. It is about trying to hold on to the simple time concepts of “here, now and the present moment” – things the rest of us can take for granted but not Henry and Clare, who are cruelly denied any such luxury by fate.
(Read the rest of the review here)
The Time Traveler’s Wife has received acclaimed praise since its publication in 2003, winning the Orange Broadband Prize in 2004 and the British Book Award in 2006. In 2007, it was adapted for screenplay. Written by Bruce Joel Rubin and directed by Robert Schwentke, it stars Eric Bana as Henry and Rachel McAdams as Clare. The film is due for release on 14 August 2009.
I give this book a rating of 5 out of 5. Fresh, original and totally mesmerizing. I cried many times while reading this book. Felt affected, dreamy and so deeply touched by the romance of Henry and Clare. The ending scene is just so totally beautiful that I read and re-read it 5 times, trying to hold on a little longer before finally closing the book. In short, I loved it and have been recommending it to everyone I know.
If you plan on getting this book (again, I highly recommend it), I would suggest a visit to this link to download Clare and Henry’s timeline just as an aid to keeping track of the dates and events so you have a sense of chronology.








Thought we'll never hear from you, and now you are back! Glad that you are back! I read the book a few days ago, put it down and was due to return to the library. Somebody had booked it and there is no way I could renew, so I reserved it. I brought it to the library last Saturday, and the librarian said I get to keep the book, because the next one up is me! weird.. but now I would have to read before the next person reserve it again…
sorry i bored you with my long winded story. But yeah, I was slightly irritated and confused at the beginning of the book, but as suggested by you, I should hold on to it. If you said the book is good, it must be good.
It is also a thick book, so I can understand why it took you so………. long.. I'm reading Tutankhamum by Nick Drake now, will hop off to Time traveler's wife the next. keep reading and reviewing!
Hey Jovenus,I've been with a few appeal cases these few weeks and have felt guilty reading books other than my law books.So it took me a while, yes, with The Time Traveler's Wife. There were also times when I deliberately slowed down so I didn't finish it too quickly. It's like going out on a romantic dinner and dreading the end of the wonderful evening, so you find places to go to just to extend time with your lover. Weird analogy but you know what I mean.I'm now almost halfway through Haruki Murakami's The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle. Another surreal work which I see is also on your list. Why don't you jump to that book instead? I'd like to know what you think of it.Sent via BlackBerry from Maxis
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I know what you mean.. going out on romantic dinner and taking your time to finish it..
I have been caught in a whirlwind of activities at work, taking on a KPI reporting for the Board for the first time, so the past week really stressed me out. This is the first time I got this stressed that I couldn't start any books properly. I picked up The Nation by Terry Pratchett, decided to abandon the book. Picked up The shipping news by Annie Proulx (author of Brokeback mountains), can't continue with it. Now I'm getting into Tutankhamun, then I'll read the Time traveller's wife, then the winded-up bird chronicles, all thicksters!!! so God help me!
I need to de-stress.
Lucky I'm taking leave from work for the whole of next week, so I can read and blog to my heart's contend.
That's funny. You … Can't read because of stress. Cute. Cheer up. You'll get through this week. I bet you're looking forward to next week. Just reading and blogging – pure bliss!Sent via BlackBerry from Maxis
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