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Time of the Cat

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It’s time to take history seriously.

The cats and humans of Chronos College know that time travel is the best job in the world, and nothing bad can ever happen to them in the past… except that one time they lost a traveller. And that other time they lost a cat.

Now they have a chance to make up for past mistakes by rescuing a long lost legend. If only they could convince Professor Boswell, the grumpiest marmalade tabby of all time, to join their mission to the Swinging Sixties, and save one of their own. (Plus pick up a missing piece or two of lost media along the way.)

Join Ruthven, Boswell, Monterey and Lovelace on the most chaotic time travel adventure of their lives. Featuring special appearances by Cleopatra, Anne Boleyn, famous actress Fleur Shropshire, and the even more famous house where they filmed TV show Cramberleigh between 1964-1986.

Time of the Cat is a cozy sci-fi romp through the centuries, featuring academic endnotes, epic friendships, and far more cat hair than is strictly necessary. If you’d rather use time travel to steal the pens of famous writers of history than stop to fill in the proper paperwork, then this is the novel for you.

383 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 6, 2023

4 people are currently reading
223 people want to read

About the author

Tansy Rayner Roberts

133 books314 followers
Tansy Rayner Roberts is a fantasy and science fiction author who lives in southern Tasmania, somewhere between the tall mountain with snow on it, and the beach that points towards Antarctica.

Tansy has a PhD in Classics (with a special interest in poisonous Roman ladies), and an obsession with Musketeers.

You can hear Tansy talking about Doctor Who on the Verity! podcast. She also reads her own stories on the Sheep Might Fly podcast.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for Olivia Atwater.
Author 17 books3,476 followers
January 22, 2024
Time of the Cat is one of the most delightful, absolutely bonkers books I've ever read. If Doctor Who picked up a talking feline companion and paused every so often to offer zany footnotes about time travel and cult TV shows, you might get a story something like this one.

The book begins as Ruthven discovers a lost time traveller from Chronos College caught on-film in a frame from a 1960s television episode. Ruthven—tragically cat-less—soon teams up with the lost traveller's cranky cat in order to bring her back, using his obsessive knowledge of the TV show's history to navigate the situation.

As one might expect, given the time travel shenanigans, things only continue to get stranger from there.

The stars of the entire story really are the talking cats, between their not-always-successful attempts at dignity and their silent power games of "who's sitting in the highest spot". But this book is also a charming ode to Doctor Who, with its over-the-top timey-wimey revelations and its hangouts with historical figures. Overall, it was a wonderfully absurd, low-stress read that regularly made me smile.
Profile Image for Allison Hurd.
Author 4 books942 followers
August 6, 2025
So, when I read this, I was sick. Broth-only, 12 hours of sleep sick. It was the perfect read to pick you up when everything is too much. Ahem. *cough* see 2025 *cough*

CONTENT WARNINGS:

Things to love:

-Cat supremacy. If you long for cats to lead us, look no further.

-Shenanigans galore. The shenaniganiest.

Why you should temper your expectations:

-Time travel. It's the bullshittiest of time travels. It has fun with it, but wow are these kids bad at their jobs, and yikes does this only really make sense if you're absolutely feverish.

-Left turn. Surely you saw it coming. And you should! But do recall the sickness with which I was down.

A very fun way to convalesce. I would gladly continue with this world the next time I am surpassingly ill.
Profile Image for Tehani.
Author 24 books97 followers
December 28, 2023
A rollicking, timey wimey love letter to TV fandom, history’s mysteries, academia and found family. With talking cats!
Profile Image for Miriam Mulcahy.
32 reviews5 followers
January 13, 2024
This was SO MUCH FUN. It was Connie Willis-esque time travelling historians and old British TV shows and fandom and adventure and mystery and friendship and footnotes that had me thinking of Terry Pratchett every time I fumbled pages flipping back and forth to the end of chapters. I loved it, but next time through I’m reading the digital version 😝 Also, talking cats. Perfection.
Profile Image for Azrah.
356 reviews5 followers
March 5, 2025
[This review can also be found on my BLOG]

**I read this book as a judge for the fourth annual Self Published Science Fiction Competition (SPSFC), this review is solely my own and does not reflect the opinions of the whole team**

CW: swearing, loss and grief, panic attacks, mention of an accident
--

Time of the Cat is an absolutely delightful little book that is the right balance of chaotic and light-hearted. It is based around a secret society of time travellers who are obsessed with a 20th century British tv show called Cramberleigh that they are constantly recovering lost episodes of on their time travel trips. When rare footage from the unaired pilot episode of the show is found and they catch a glimpse of Cressida Church, a renowned time traveller who got separated from her cat Professor Boswell and so lost in time a few years ago, a group decide to take it upon themselves to go rescue her.

This was an entertaining read through and through and I loved how whacky all the characters were, including the cats who each had their own boisterous personalities and also talked! It is both a love letter to fandom culture and a wholesome adventure between friends where the stakes may be high with the potential threat of causing travel banning Events as well as encounters with members of the enemy group The Anachronauts, but the casual tone made it more fun to follow along with than anything else.

I did find that thing started to slow down a little in the middle when there was a bit of back and forth in the dialogue but I was invested with pretty much every single one of the characters by then so it didn’t bother me too much. You can expect a good laugh from all the jokes and banter, a nice dose of drama as well as cameos from well known names from ancient history.

The amount of thought that has gone into putting the story together really shines through particularly with all the extra details to do with Cramberleigh that have been included and it made the book all the more enjoyable to me. Plus I really like how everything tied up at the end.

If you’re loving cosy sci-fi/fantasy books as well as books involving cat/animal companions that are all the hype at the moment then you’re in for a treat with this book that combines both! I can’t recommend it enough.
Profile Image for Serena.
732 reviews35 followers
August 24, 2025
Tansy Rayner Roberts is a favorite author of mine, her podcast Sheep Might Fly is where she tells her short stories and 'Time of the Cat' is one which she kickstarted and I backed in 2023.

In the spirit of the book- this review contains footnotes which may have spoilers!

Amidst Ruthven and Oxford's flirting, in a conspiracy of colleges and cats, begins our tale.

Professor Boswell's (he is the tabby cat in the Viking helmet on the cover btw!) missing in time human Cressida Church is spotted on film at a Cramberleigh screening party after Oxford brings back some found/stolen footage. Cramberleigh is the well known favorite TV-show of time travelers and knowing where Cressida Church is sends them on a rescue mission involving missing memories, scattered time travelers, and Events where time becomes "a big ball of wibbly wobbly, timey wimey stuff*1" full of topsy-turvy people from history and the mysterious time aisles that link them.

Joining in on the rescue team is Oxford's cat Nero, fellow friends/rival time travelers of Cressida - Monterey and Lovelace, and Cressida's sister Fenella* who go looking for her at Fenthorpe manor that starts a adventure that upends everything they think they know about time travel, the future, talking cats and missing cats (and persons)*3, the show, and the 'rules?' of time travel.

Full of fun fanish lore of 'Cramberleigh' that's a mix of Doctor Who, and one assumes Upstairs Downstairs (I've never seen it so I'm going with the author's perspective) and a conspiracy between cats and rival time travel colleges - Chronos College (who's cats and humans we most closely f0llow), Aleidster College ('the Anachronauts'~) and Banksia College (who saves rare animals, aww!) that just proves time spent with a cat (or book) is never wasted.

---

*1 this quote is not in the book and is from Doctor Who, Season 3, Episode 10 "Blink" it perpetually lives in my head to describe time, sorry.
*2 Fenella Church joins rather ...accidentally, lol, it's time travel.
*3 yes, cats go 'missing' in time, sometimes with their humans, sometimes without them

---

"Tales of Cramberleigh" was a fun digital bonus that put me in mind of Geekerella where a "fan" shares three short fanfics set in Cramberleigh's TV show as if it were real.
Profile Image for Nicole (bookwyrm).
1,354 reviews4 followers
March 6, 2024
I follow Tansy Rayner Roberts' book updates (via her newsletter and her Patreon), so when I saw the posts talking about a Kickstarter for a book with time traveling cats, I knew I had to back it. I ended up backing at a decently high level, which got me copies of all 3 book formats (paperback, digital, and audio) and yet after reading what Tansy (and other readers) had to say about the audiobook I knew that was the format I wanted to read this in. And I'm glad I did! Ciaran Saward is a new-to-me narrator, but did such a wonderful job with this book.

To start with: the basic plot is that cats can both speak and time travel. They can bring humans with them when they travel, but without a cat, humans are stuck moving through time the usual way. At the start of this book, the time travelers get a clue about the location of the time traveler they previously lost in time, and decide to mount a rescue mission to get her back.

Of course, things go wrong and get complicated, and the result is a romp through time as our cast jumps here and there trying to save everyone without getting in more trouble. (Spoiler: trouble finds them. Of course.) It's a lot of fun to see different time periods through the lens of travelers from our future, and the humor throughout was tons of fun.

While I would say that this is meant to be a book for adults, due to the age of the protagonists (all out of college) and some of the subject matter (mostly around grief and betrayal) it could easily be read by young adults. Younger children could also read it as well and enjoy it a lot, though I would recommend that an adult read it along with them to help with some of the more adult themes or references.

I had a ton of fun with this book, though, and I would highly recommend it to anyone who thinks it sounds remotely interesting. I'd also suggest the audiobook; while Tansy's print books are good, the audio steps this one up a notch and makes it even better. Regardless of what book sites may say, this was marketed on Kickstarter as a standalone, and it definitely works as one. (I'm unclear if series plans have been added now that the book is published, or if it is going to remain a standalone.)
Profile Image for Erin.
44 reviews
December 23, 2023
Fun book and the audio narration is excellent!
Profile Image for Clarissa Gosling.
Author 24 books109 followers
January 21, 2024
Glorious and mind-boggling. A joy to read and discover all the hat-tips to other media. With great cats, too!
Profile Image for Jay Brantner.
487 reviews32 followers
January 25, 2025
I read Time of the Cat as part of a judging team for the fourth annual Self-Published Science Fiction Competition, where it is a quarterfinalist.

This is a lighthearted time travel romp that feels like a love letter to fandom—at no point does it take itself seriously, and sometimes that’s just what you need. It’s a quick read that starts out silly and makes the jump to absurd fairly quickly. A secret college of humans and cats have discovered how to travel in time, and they use their knowledge mostly to find old footage of a UK TV series that they’re all obsessed with for some reason (there is textual explanation for this obsession. Also there is an appendix listing all the episodes from the 14-season initial run, the three TV movies, and the three-season 80s spinoff. Like I said, love letter to fandom). But someone gets lost, they need a rescue, there are crazy anachronisms out the wazoo, possibly a deadly plot afoot. It’s wild.

I’m not sure I’d call this laugh-out-loud funny in the mold of Douglas Adams, but it’s consistently pleasant, amusing, and easy to read and certainly prompts a chuckle every now and again. I’m not sure how well it’d hold up for someone who hasn’t been fairly online in the last decade or so, but even if you’re not deep in fandom specific spaces (as I am not), it was still a pretty entertaining read.

The plot is about as coherent as it needs to be in order to give the story some structure and prevent it from being a series of jokes strung together, but this one is really about the tone. It’s fun, and that’s all it needs to be.

First impression: 15/20. Full review and SPSFC score to come at www.tarvolon.com
Profile Image for Nancy Foster.
Author 13 books137 followers
May 8, 2025
I am one of the judges of team Space Girls for the SPSFC4 contest. This review is my personal opinion. Officially, it is still in the running for the contest, pending any official team announcements.

Status: Semifinalist
Read: 100%

When I first saw the contestant book covers, this one piqued my interest because, well, it's obvious! A cat wearing a historically inaccurate Viking helmet wandering around? I am intrigued!

And as the stars aligned in the right place, this semifinalist was assigned to my team. Now, even though I started reading the book a bit sooner than other semis, it took me the longest to finish reading. The first 10% was somewhat difficult for me because the comedy is very British so to say and multiple characters are introduced. I would have wanted the time travel talking cats to serve a larger role early in the story.

Outside of Ruthven, and to a lesser degree the missing traveller Cressida, the other human travellers are supporting cast. Out of the cats we meet, Boswell as the stereotypical British grumpy professor was my favorite. Which is funny because it seems totally implausible Boswell could ever be the cat in the cover because he's both a grump and would rather be skinned alive than wear a Viking helmet.

Much to my glee, Time of the cat starts moving forward around the 32%. Ruthven is tasked to team up with Boswell and travel to Fenthorpe manor, the filming location of the Lost Media tv show every time traveller is obsessed with 'Cramberleigh'. A show that reminded me of Downton Abbey with vampires. Things get wacky, time travel gets murky and readers might need to ignore Cleopatra's brand new Hello Kitty shoes.

The book gets weirder as it progresses and it was real fun getting to meet each cat whose personalities are as varied as their fur color. While I never got to understand how cats activate portals or verify they team up with humans to use them as their servants, this romp was a fun ride!
Profile Image for Molokov.
510 reviews4 followers
January 14, 2024
A very fun light-hearted time travel romp, with talking cats! I was a little concerned with the disjointed nature of the prose and frequent footnotes in the early part of the book, but once the story starts going it smooths out and the remainder of the book is a pure delight (and the footnotes add great flavour and don't interrupt the flow at all). If you love sci-fi, cats, and old television shows that may have been mostly lost to history, then you'll have a great time with this.
153 reviews1 follower
December 24, 2024
I listened to this book and for the first half was laughing out loud. However, it turned darker towards the second half before it got lighter again.

The narrator was Cieran Sewerd, and he was brilliant! He made all the voices different so you knew exactly who was talking at any time. I've read other books by Tansy, and I'm going to be looking out for lots more. She writes well, with good thought out ideas and plots that work. Her world building is great.

Pour yourself a cup of tea and read/listen to this book! You'll love it - it's got talking cats, enough said.
Profile Image for I.K. Stokbaek.
Author 3 books10 followers
November 27, 2024
This was hilarious. The feline characters are brilliant and believable despite the fact they can talk, and the plot is fun and well paced. The footnotes I found a little distracting at first, and I ended up just skimming them to avoid getting overwhelmed. I thoroughly enjoyed the book. Great for cat lovers.
Profile Image for Zoë Routh.
Author 13 books72 followers
July 6, 2024
what a riot!

A witty, outrageous romp with time traveling cats and their humans. Add in mystery and intrigue, a whole immersive world of the show Cramberleigh, and you have a quirky, hysterical read. An excellent escape.
Profile Image for Tina.
998 reviews37 followers
September 21, 2025
I received this book from the SPSFC4, where I was a judge. This book was a semi-finalist in the competition, and I'm sorry to the author for posting this so late. While my reviews on other places went up back in May, I've been bogged down in my written reviews.

A delightful travel romp with cats, Time of the Cat is a lot of fun! I listened to the book on Audible, and the narrator did a great job - the voices, especially of the cats, were great.

This is one of those “lost in time” paradox novels, where the characters are literally trapped in various time periods, but then weird anachronisms start happening, which suggests other things might be afoot.

The story is very British, though I, as a Canadian, found it easy enough to understand the overall joke of the show Cramberleigh and even caught some references to other UK stuff from real life. Not all of it, of course, but I do enjoy the odd British show here and there.

The characters are a lot of fun. It’s third-person multi-pov, so we follow quite a few characters on their journeys. There are some little romances, cat and guardian dynamics, friendships, and colleague banter that give the whole thing a very cozy and workplace comedy feel. There’s some great LGBTQ rep, which was nice, but the star of the show was the cats. They were so funny and cute. They talk, but they still act like cats, and even why they act the way they do now that they can talk is touched upon. It’s very fun.

I will say, though, that while I thought this book was bonkers in the best way and absolutely delightful, the middle section does drag a bit. I turned up the speed on my audiobook for a while because I was starting to get a bit bored. But then it picks back up again.

The book also has copious footnotes that are a riot. I love, frankly unneeded, footnotes in novels, and this book has a billion of them. They really do add to the worldbuilding and fill in some gaps, too.

Overall, if you’re looking for something cozy, has fun dialogue and settings, is an ode to fandom, and has cats, look no further.
596 reviews14 followers
October 30, 2024

I originally got this through a Kickstarter last year, but for some reason never read it

It was wonderful! Hilariously wacky with some terrific characters - both human and cat. And I enjoyed the funny academic endnotes for each chapter.

The time traveling humans of Chronos College are a little obsessed (in an entirely nerdy fandom way) with the fictional world of the 20th century television show Cramberleigh. When they catch a glimpse of one of their lost time travelers in a recently recovered episode, they, along with the talking cats that are the key to time travel, mount a rescue operation.

Zany adventures ensue!

The narrator, Ciaran Saward is excellent, but I found it a little hard to follow the adventures. I think it would be better to read the first time and reread on audio.

If you enjoyed Connie Willis' To Say Nothing About the Dog or Jodi Taylor’s Chronicles of St. Mary's and thought, “but this would be even better with talking cats”, then you'll love this book!
56 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2025
Sorry but I found none of the characters likeable (human as well as cat), most were rather pathetic. And I know it is just a story, but not only did the ending feel contrived, but what the supposedly good guys did to the not really bad society of cats when escaping back to their own time was simply horrible. There were other things as well, mainly to do with the (future) cats, that did not seem right or were left hanging. The book is OK for the first half or so, which is why I persisted with it, but (for me) lost its way after that.
Profile Image for Amy Campbell.
Author 14 books130 followers
June 10, 2024
I got this as an audiobook for supporting the Kickstarter. I wish I'd listened to it sooner--it was fabulous!

What I thought was going to be a rather silly book had twists and turns and posed ethical questions that really made me think. It was a fun story to listen to, and I enjoyed the various points of view and the diversity of the cast.
Profile Image for Linda Lassman.
738 reviews8 followers
June 17, 2024
This was an ok read. It was an interesting concept, but it seemed like Roberts was just trying to hard to be clever and funny, so for me it just fell flat. I quite enjoy the Tea Cup series that Roberts has written, though, so I think this may just have been a blip.

And I'm all there for talking cats controlling time travel!
13 reviews
October 10, 2024
Excellent book! I loved the characters, which was even nicer considering I listened to the audiobook.
The plot was intriguing and sometimes confusing and played havoc with the imagination. How to unravel this whole situation.
And just when you think there is no way out, a way out is presented and seems completely logical and attainable.
Want more now.....
Profile Image for Robbie.
785 reviews5 followers
July 10, 2025
I'm happily surprised at how good this is. It has enough crazy twists in it to compare to P.G. Wodehouse and enough silly but strangely coherent asides to compare to Douglas Adams. It's one of those books that, despite being full of surprises, would probably be just as good if I reread it even a year from now.
Profile Image for Shaz.
1,017 reviews19 followers
April 27, 2024
Four and a half stars

This was delightful fun crazy time travel hijinks with cats.
22 reviews
June 9, 2024
Too chopped up for me. I prefer exposition with dialogue and a continous story.
Profile Image for Tara.
1 review
June 11, 2024
This book was delightful and hilarious.
Profile Image for Paul.
98 reviews1 follower
August 24, 2024
A no spoilers review, bonkers, delightfully mind bending.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews

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