This Is How You Lose the Time War
By Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
This Is How You Lose the Time War is a science-fiction novella about two rival agents—Red and Blue—on opposite sides of a vast, shape-shifting war fought across timelines, empires, and possible futures. As they chase each other through collapsing civilizations and rewritten histories, they begin leaving taunts, then letters, hidden in increasingly impossible places. What starts as professional rivalry slowly turns into something more intimate, more dangerous, and more human.
Long after I read the last word, I still think about this story. Even with the setting and characters taking place so far from our known reality in both time and place, even when the main characters are by no means “human”, the story and connection unfolds into something truly intimate and profound. With every correspondence between Red and Blue, a charged rivalry drips into a deep love but carefully placed within poetic fragments found through space and time. The exchange captured such an honest intimacy with characters that for the most part are never physically in the same place for long.
This story was short, unique, and emotionally sharp. The world building, missions, danger, and deep emotions all came together in what is at its core a love story.
Let’s not forget this is a queer story and I think the letter writing format does a great service to that point. Perhaps one of the reasons so much of this book resonated with me is because its progression and intensity in terms of how the romance progressed was sapphic at heart.
While this book has gotten a lot of praise, there are some reviews out there that have some common themes such as not following the time travel aspect, they wished the enemies to lovers was given more development (while acknowledging this is a novella), or perhaps the language was too poetic not leaving much to grab hold of. I think this book asks the reader to assess how it makes them feel versus spending too much time carving the sharp edges of the world we’re invited into.
I cannot recommend this book enough.