
One Day All This Will Be Yours
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Narrated by:
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Adrian Tchaikovsky
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
Nobody remembers how the Causality War started. Really, there's no-one to remember and nothing for them to remember if there were; that's sort of the point. We were time warriors and we broke time.
I was the one who ended it. Ended the fighting, tidied up the damage as much as I could.
Then I came here, to the end of it all, and gave myself a mission: to never let it happen again.
©2021 Adrian Tchaikovsky (P)2021 Penguin Audio and Rebellion PublishingHere, the Casualty War ended everything, and a lone survivor lives a blissful existence at the end of time, just him and his menagerie of robotic assistants and one very faithful and vicious protector, - spending his days tending to his farm, jumping into the past to collect supplies, and dealing with survivors of the war and other time travellers who find their way here... until the appearance of one who changes everything.
One Day All of This Will Be Yours is a great read - and here listen, and we're treated to the author himself as the narrator, and his voice suits the task very well. One Day All of This Will Be Yours is a serious story but it carries with it a sense of humour that Adrian brings to the story better than another narrator would.
A brilliant tale for people looking for something different, for me it's perfect for a less-intense (but still fantastic) sci-fi listening sesh which would suit fans of the (excellent) Long Earth series by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter.
Wild Time-Travel Adventures Ahead!
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Excellent if Short
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While some of Tchaikovsky’s other series go on galactic-level space opera trilogies or rich fantasy dekalogies (yes I looked that up) this piece feels more personal, especially as it’s narrated by the author.
Ideal as a companion piece to Benedict Cumberpatch reading Carlo Rovelli’s “The Order of Time”, as there are no Caligulan orgies in that one.
A new genre: ascerbic time travel sci-fi
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Brilliant time travel dark comedy
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Performed well, and one of the better audiobooks I’ve listened to this year.
Excellent all round - just a shame there isn’t more of it.
Funny, inventive, caustic, well performed
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Fantastic, a joy to listen to
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The basic premise is that a man has built a farmhouse at the end of time. He lives there alone, isolated from the rest of humanity in a landscape that is eternal and unchanging. His home is a full stop for the human race; here endeth history. Fortunately, stray time travellers occasionally stumble upon this end point to break up the monotony. Our hero is usually happy for the company, and after cooking his visitors a good meal, he murders them, usually by feeding them to his pet Allosaurus.
The story is told via a first person narrative, with the initial chapters focused on our hero's reasoning for his forced isolation and murderous tendancies. The gist of things is; humanity messed up the world and the past in a time war, and our hero is trying to protect what remains of human history. That's his rationale anyway, but things change when he gets a visit from the future, which should be impossible.
The plot is twisty and complex, with lots of time travel hijinks, philosophical pondering and a fair amount of violence. The contrast between the humour and more serious subject matter works well, and this would have been a deeply depressing book without it. Despite that, the ending is still a little dark and happens suddenly, but thematically I guess it makes sense.
One Day All This Will Be Yours is well worth checking out, even if some of the time travel logic might collapse under the smallest amount of scrutiny. It's the kind of creative, fun story I've come to expect from Tchaikovsky. It also has heart and even some melancholy, which is a hell of a lot to pack into a very short book. It would probably improve on rereading as there's so much to take in initially. I certainly wouldn't want to dissuade anyone from reading it more than once.
Audiobook - Tchaikovsky narrates this himself and does a bloody good job for the most part. His voice is well suited to our cynical, sarcastic hero, and he has good comic timing. The range of voices isn't brilliant and he's not a great actor, but I've heard much worse from author narrators.
Timeosaur
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Loved this from start to finish.
Oh, and AT should narrate all his own books from now on.
Time Travel and Murder Abound
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Very unusual
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That the author is the narrator means that all of the quirks of wording are emphasised as they were intended, which adds so much to the story that I now struggle to listen to any of his work that isn't read by him
I have now listened to this audiobook four times over the last year and I can't think of any better way of conveying how much I love it
I keep coming back
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