Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

All We Have Is Time

Not yet published
Expected 24 Feb 26
Rate this book
In this fresh and entrancing debut novel that is perfect for fans of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue and The Ministry of Time, a jaded immortal woman and a time traveler fall in love across the centuries, learning what it means to really live and love before their time together runs out.

1605, London. Beatrix lives a solitary life in the shadows, wandering the city streets looking for ways to forget. Forget that everyone she has ever loved has been dead for nearly a century. Forget that, for her, love can only ever mean loss. Because Beatrix has a secret: a lifetime ago her deathbed wish was granted, making her immortal.

Until one day, while picking pockets amid the raucous crowds of Shakespeare's Globe, she meets Oliver. They spend a single, perfect day together before he tells her that he has to leave. She’s not surprised; eternity is a lonely place.

When Beatrix and Oliver meet again by chance a century later, recognition hits her like a bolt of lightning. It’s impossible. He’s impossible. Just like her. A chance for Beatrix to truly live – and love – again sparks into existence.

Woven between the biggest events in history and the quiet moments lost to it, from London in 1605 to Woodstock in 1969 and beyond, All We Have Is Time is an unforgettable love story for anyone who believes love can rewrite the rules of time.

352 pages, Hardcover

Expected publication February 24, 2026

41 people are currently reading
10347 people want to read

About the author

Amy Tordoff

1 book41 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
75 (28%)
4 stars
108 (41%)
3 stars
55 (20%)
2 stars
14 (5%)
1 star
11 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 216 reviews
Profile Image for Courtney (why did I request all these!?).
98 reviews18 followers
August 23, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Atria Books for this ARC in exchange for my honest opinions

I normally pull my punches when I'm reviewing an ARC, especially if it's a debut author. But I absolutely will not this time. If I could give this book 0 stars I would.

DNF at 50%, although I do intend to flip to the last few chapters out of morbid curiosity.

The book shamelessly calls itself, "perfect for fans of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue" and then goes on to blatantly rip off Addie LaRue at every last turn. When I started the book, my first thought was, "oh okay, so this is like a fan fiction of Addie LaRue". Seeing as I'm a huge fan of that book, I was not totally against that and kept reading. But it just got worse and worse. The premise, the characters, the "curse", entire scenes are lifted straight out of Addie LaRue. It honestly feels like someone took Addie LaRue, fed it into ChatGPT with some prompts and published what came out.

I know this is a very, very strong opinion to assert, but when I got to the scene where the FMC and the love interest are literally in a whispering gallery, a scene straight out of Addie LaRue, I could not deal with it anymore. It is unabashed and unapologetic, so I have decided I will be as well.

The in between parts, that aren't taken directly from Addie LaRue, are nonsensical, confusing, and not well written. Things are not explained. There's no motive for the actions of many of the characters.

I will come back and add to my review once I've read the end. I'm curious if the end is going to be what I think it is.

EDIT: I have skimmed the last 4 chapters of the ending. I don't know if this is a spoiler? Can you spoil a book that's ripping off another book? It ends EXACTLY THE SAME as Addie LaRue. Disgusting.
Profile Image for The Book Dragon.
391 reviews251 followers
December 3, 2025
I just… wow. I finished this book completely in awe and honestly heartbroken.

All We Have Is Time grabbed me from the very first page and did not let go. It is one of those rare books that feels huge and sweeping yet so intimate, like you are right there living every moment with the characters.

Beatrix is unforgettable, lonely, guarded, and immortal, yet somehow still hopeful in ways she does not even realize. And Oliver, their connection is just everything. Every time their paths cross, my heart literally ached.

The story moving from 1605 London to Woodstock in 1969 and beyond is done so perfectly. I felt like I was really there, walking the streets, feeling the crowds, living the history.

And the ending, oh my god. I cried like a baby. It was heartbreaking, beautiful, and somehow so full of hope all at once. This is the kind of book that will sit with me for a long time.

If you love stories about time, fate, and love that refuses to let go even across centuries, this book is a must-read.

Provided by Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Tiffany.
845 reviews91 followers
Want to read
August 21, 2025
"Debut novel that is perfect for fans of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue"

...absolutely YES. I am a sucker for a good time travel story.

Thank you, Atria Books, for sending me this ARC!!! 😊

Pub Date Feb 24 2026

As always, all thoughts are my own. 🖤✨
Profile Image for SJARR ✨.
331 reviews47 followers
January 28, 2026
I am undeniably devastated and heartbroken. A fictional story has no right to hurt me this way.

Beatrix is immortal. Cursed to live through the ages. Through disease, famine and war, without hope love or lasting human connection.That is until she meets Oliver.
Oliver is a time traveller, who travels to the past and meets Beatrix several times by chance.
Their connection grows, and Beatrix finally sees a light at the end of the tunnel- the love she thought she could never have.

This book took me through so many emotions, i hardly know what to say.
I almost feel as if i myself have lived through the ages after reading it.
I mean really, this story takes you through time. It is kind of incredible.

I was so terrifed for the ending.
I felt so strongly for both Beatrix and Oliver. I was so in love with their story, and with them as a couple. It was really strong and so beautiful.
I was simply not prepared for any tragedy.

The only thing that took this from a 5 star read to a 4 star read- was beginning
It took me until about the 30% mark to really get into it, it just has a slow start.
But, fear not, it does pick up! It quickly becomes incredibly interesting and heartfelt.

I really enjoyed it overall!

Thank you to Netgalley, Atria Books and author Amy Tordoff for providing me with the eARC of “All We Have is Time”, in exchange for my honest review!
Publication date: February 24th, 2026
Profile Image for Selma.
44 reviews10 followers
February 11, 2026
Ya I cried ! This was a beautiful read. My fav book is The Invisible Life of Addie Larue so when I heard this compared to it I knew I had to read this. We meet Beatrix who like Addie makes a wish and she becomes immortal. I really liked to see her character as she was a child and what kind of life she lived before everything happens. What her thought process was and what she wanted out of life.. it was as if she knew somehow she wasn’t meant for this life she had to do bigger things.

As the story progressed were brought to different times in history which I enjoyed and I thought how the characters meet and the way in which the MMC is able to meet her was something I didn’t expect. I thought it would also be something supernatural as well! That was the difference from Addie Larue as I see it being compared a lot to it. The stories are similar but the background and how things are done or even the love story is built on something different.

The way the story end and ties itself all together def made me cry I was so sad for what is to come.. and when it did I was crying at the feelings described by everyone around. Beautifully written. Recommend if you like a tear jerker and time travel.💙
Profile Image for Monica Hills.
1,386 reviews68 followers
October 1, 2025
This book was an incredible blend of fantasy, time travel, and historical fiction. I honestly loved this book because it had all of the elements I enjoy in a story. It has also been a while since I have cried so much while reading a book.

Beatrix was born in the late 1400s. She has lived a life as an outcast from her village and even her family because she has two different colored eyes. others see her as something unnatural. She eventually meets someone and falls in love but her life is cut too short. She makes a wish to live and her wish is granted with a twist. She is immortal and forever stuck in her twenties. Her life becomes one of survival until she meets a man named Oliver in London and then sees him again in Italy more than 100 years later. Beatrix and Oliver form a bond that will span centuries and endure so many challenges. This story was heartbreaking but powerful.

I had to give this book 5 Stars because I was so invested in these two characters. It was hard to even fathom being alive as long as Beatrix and to deal with everything she had to go through. The book just stuck with me as I could not stop thinking about life and what it would mean to live that long. Oliver was another fascinating character in a different way. His story was just as heartbreaking. If you love time travel, history, and books that will make you think, this is the book for you.

Thank you to Atria Books and NetGalley for this ARC.
Profile Image for Carol Ogden.
175 reviews4 followers
September 28, 2025
As a huge fan of VE Schwab's Invisible Life of Addie LaRue I am having a really hard time rating this book. I was so excited for the advanced copy from Net Galley. I love the idea, but it felt like a rip off. Like I have read and loved this book already but it was Schwab's version.

The similarities are undeniable. Swap gods of the Dark for fairies, freckles for 2 different colored eyes, and another terminal love interest who is a time traveler instead of bookshop owner.

Even the places they visit and times they live are almost identical. I can say I loved reading it but I love Addie LaRue so much that ofcourse I love a book just like it. I'd say skip the rip off and read the beautiful original which has way more heart and intrigue anyway.
Profile Image for Bevany.
684 reviews15 followers
September 25, 2025
if you liked addie larue, this felt like a way better version to me. I loved the story and the time jumps. the characters were loveable. I love that the characters' story took place over so many years and places.
The concept of this book is great. clean book no smut.
Profile Image for James.
433 reviews33 followers
September 19, 2025
Okay, but where's the flavor? Literally where?

Beatrix is cursed with immortality. Oliver is a time traveler trying to get the most out of his short life. Time as old as time (haha). Only able to meet intermittently over the course of decades, their relationship spins into a messy romance, complicated by their circumstances and inescapable connection.

As another review says, this is a pretty blatant play on The Invisible Life of Addie Larue. The details of Beatrix's deal for her immortality is actually shockingly similar, as is the ending. They aren't exactly the same what with the time traveling element but also this book is just desperately lacking in what I call flavor. Neither Oliver nor Beatrix are particularly unique or compelling characters, and they would really need to be since this book by nature skips around a lot in a way that evades a really tangible plot or setting. I was hoping for at least some sci-fi stuff but they really don't touch on the details of the time travel or what the future is like. There's not a lot of internal tension or conflict, nothing particularly special about Beatrix and Oliver's relationship, no real flair to the writing, and a noticeable lack of world-building.

I'm not sure I would even recommend this for fan of Addie Larue because it is evidently a lackluster version of the same story. Maybe if you want a pretty straightforward romance with some fantasy/sci-fi elements but really don't expect much because you won't get it.

Thank yo to Amy Tordoff and Atria Books for this ARC in exchange for my full, honest review!

Happy reading!
Profile Image for thebookaerie.
69 reviews1 follower
September 3, 2025
3.5/5 ⭐️
I’m in love with Bea and Oliver and their sweeping adventure through time.

This book is a lovely dance between two characters who meet, part ways, and then come together throughout history for seemingly brief moments to share a space in time. Their reunions find them at significant points in history, that as the reader you’ll want to research and explore on your own. Each character living along their own time line, one moving forward through time… the other visiting from the future.

Bea is cursed to live as an immortal, and Oliver is a time traveler from the future. You’ll want to read on through the centuries with them, experiencing moments that bring them happiness, to terrifying periods of war and disease. They return to each other time and again, feeling the warmth of reunion, the heartaches of goodbyes, to the longing through the years apart.

I loved the characters, traveling through time with them, and learning about moments lost to the past. I thoroughly enjoyed it and would recommend it, especially to those who have loved books such as Addie Larue, and the movie The Time Traveler’s Wife.

**If you’re a very big fan of Addie Larue you might be conflicted with the resemblances between this and Addie. I was a bit challenged in writing my review for this, and just wanted to note it.

I’m thrilled to have had the opportunity to read this prior to release. Thank you Netgalley for the early read!
Profile Image for Leanna Streeter.
410 reviews39 followers
February 9, 2026
I was immediately drawn in by the premise of this story. Love that stretches across time is always a favorite theme of mine, and the writing had a beautiful, atmospheric quality that made Beatrix’s journey feel immersive.

This is very much a romance story centered on an immortal woman and a time traveler whose paths cross throughout history. I appreciated the reflective themes about life, love, and what it means to truly live.

However, I did struggle a bit with how similar it felt to The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. While I enjoy that type of story, some elements felt too familiar, and I found myself wishing for a more distinct voice to set it apart.

Overall, this was a solid read with lovely writing and an emotional core. It may especially appeal to readers who enjoy sweeping, time-spanning love stories with a magical touch. Thanks to Atria for the ARC.
Profile Image for Lanie.
76 reviews14 followers
August 23, 2025
I didn’t expect this book to evolve the way it did. It starts with a young girl shunned for her different colored eyes in a small village in the 1400s. It ends with so much heartbreak and joy and love.
An immortal and a time traveler falling in love is a fantastical notion and the author captures the very real human emotions tied up in an impossible situation.
If all we do is survive are we living? If all we have is memories are they enough? These questions and so many more are answered and explored in this story about how desperately we need human connection no matter who we are. This book made me cry like a baby. It made me appreciate history all the more. And it definitely made me feel like Bea and Oliver’s story was being told to me by them.


I received an ARC courtesy of NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Bridget Sadenwater.
65 reviews6 followers
October 26, 2025
All We Have Is Time is a beautifully written story that drew me in right away. Early on, it reminded me so much of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue that it was hard not to make comparisons, but as the story unfolded, it developed its own unique voice and direction. I really enjoyed the characters, and the romance between Oliver and Beatrix was especially sweet and heartfelt. If I hadn’t already read Addie LaRue, I think I would have enjoyed this even more, but regardless, it’s an engaging and emotional read that stands well on its own.

Thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for providing the arc
Profile Image for Jenn.
259 reviews13 followers
September 27, 2025
I was bamboozled by the premise but this was such a slog to get through and overall underwhelming. I really don’t want to leave a negative review but I forced myself to read this. I wanted to dnf at 25% but I trudged on.

Ultimately this book is incredibly boring. Bea is such a boring character. She has immortal life and nothing happens? Like she doesn’t even try to save some money and amass some wealth for herself? 100 years sometimes pass between chapters and the chapters we get just some stuff happens.

It’s such a boring romance. Oliver and Bea have no chemistry. I’m not rooting for them. I literally didn’t care nor wanted to finish reading this but I forced myself to DNF. It doesn’t get better.

I was hoping for some cool subplots. Nope… literally nothing is happening. It’s ok writing and the author clearly likes history. It just didn’t work for me.

I really do hate to be critical because I wanted to love this book but it wasn’t for me.

Thank you to NetGalley for a free ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for isabellerosereads.
135 reviews168 followers
January 27, 2026
3.25-3.5⭐️ did this make me sob for nearly 30 minutes at the last 30%? Yes. Did it also feel like an Addie Larue rip off for a majority of the plot? Also yes.

Tropes/themes:
✨immortal woman x time traveler mmc
✨historical fiction woven in (they meet at iconic events in history)
✨the meaning of life/making the most of one’s time
✨vague Fae lore?
✨romance heavy > plot heavy

As a fan of the Invisible Life of Addie Larue, I’ve read a few books that blurb it as a comp title, but none that actually felt like it took specific plot threads from the original story…until now.

Faustian bargain with vague magical creature in the woods that taunts them for the immortal life to get their soul? Check. < vague other thing that is a spoiler> ? Check.

Yet it somehow still lacks the emotional range in any of the book’s characters other than the main two - i kept forgetting we even had side characters (only in the mmc’s life rlly) until they jumpscared me in his povs. The pacing between our romantic moments and trying to flesh out the mmc’s own tragic lifestory just didn’t flow well to me.

Now, look, I’m a weak woman when it comes to bittersweet romance and I can acknowledge the author’s talent in dragging out the sweet torturous moments. I’m also PMSing right now and heavy in my emotional era, so it’s kind of a self setup moment right now. So yes, I’m typing this review through swollen eyes despite my earlier complaining - the emotional depth is definitely there for me in the last 30% at least.

The book is bingeable enough that I didn’t feel like it took me too long to casually enjoy myself, but I definitely didn’t feel hooked until 60% in, and even then it was more for the emotional impact of the inevitable ending events.

I would’ve liked this more if it maybe leaned more into the time travel aspect to give it a more unique feel when leveraged against the FMC’s copycat Addie storyline. The plot being the romance itself was kinda lackluster to me; I just wanted more details to flesh out our characters, world or inner meanings instead of the author repeating some of the same events or just telling us flatout what the characters mean in every particular moment.

Also the ending kinda confused me, i didn’t even realize where we ended up until the epilogue of sorts. I don’t know if I learned the ending message lmao, but I needed the cry so it did that well. If you want a book that kind of feels like a predictable Hallmark-movie-esque version of Addie Larue and want a little cry, give this a read!

Thank you to Atria for the gifted ARC! All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Mackenzi.
273 reviews5 followers
August 28, 2025
3.5/5 Stars
All We Have is Time is marketed as perfect for fans of " The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue" and while that is true, it is in ways almost too much like Addie LaRue. Parts of it read the same as Addie, and that can be infuriating when you're expecting something to be slightly like it not almost exactly like it.
I will say the characters weren't bad, I do feel that some of their actions and decisions were EXTREMLY questionable and made absolutely no sense whatsoever but like, everyone makes some questionable decisions I guess. They needed more backstory to become fully likeable characters. And the faerie backstory? I needed wayyy more. The use of actual history and going through time was interesting and I did like that.
Now what really got me with this one was the formatting and the way paragraphs where and maybe the arc didn't translate that great on my Kobo but there were times that the dialogue wouldn't start in a new paragraph it'd be in the same one as another character was speaking and it was a guessing game of who was actually communicating.
Thank you to Netgalley and Atria Books for an e-arc in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Hannah.
95 reviews
October 20, 2025
It kills me to say it, but this one just didn’t hit for me. It’s being marketed as The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue’s spiritual twin—and sure, there’s the whole “made a deal with a supernatural being and now immortal” thing—but what Addie had that this one doesn’t is the “nobody remembers her” hook. That was the emotional anchor, the heartbreak, the magic. Without it, we’re just following a jaded immortal wandering through European history, and… yeah. The spark wasn’t there. I was bored and just couldn’t connect with the characters or love story. Beautiful idea (if done before), but flat execution.

DNF at 40%.

Thank you to Atria Books and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review. All expressed opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Stephanie.
86 reviews6 followers
October 6, 2025
DNF at 16%. Is is possible to take too much inspiration from something? This was marketed as perfect for lovers of Addie LaRue which I am but it felt too on the nose for me. While I love dual timelines, this story felt like it didn’t need it. I think the flow would’ve been better if we got the information chronologically or even through flashbacks instead of through different chapters. I also didn’t connect with the characters at all, they were...boring.

I received an ARC in exchange for my honest review. Just because the book wasn't for me doesn't mean others won't love it.
Profile Image for zolarex.
277 reviews29 followers
June 16, 2025
Ta książka to arcydzieło 😭😭😭
Profile Image for Caitlin Furniss.
76 reviews5 followers
November 27, 2025
Wow. Just wow. I read this book in one sitting.. just over 7 hours of being completely lost in this world. What a wonderful book, so full of life and beauty whilst also being completely soul crushing and devastating at the same time. You felt like an outsider looking in on the relationship between Beatrix and Oliver and it almost felt like a privilege to have a window in to their lives, or many in Bea’s case.

This book is a masterpiece, I can already tell it will stay with me a long time. I feel haunted by it as much as thrilled to have read it. I’ve never felt so happy whilst simultaneously being close to tears, and that’s how it felt for the final 10% of this book. Never had a book where I was nervous to read the next page but absolutely could not stop myself from turning.

A five star read for me ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ thank you Amy for writing such a magnificent book.

Thank you to Viking for the ARC of this book, and NetGalley for the eARC.
Profile Image for Kirsty.
20 reviews1 follower
November 23, 2025
Netgalley - ARC review


I loved this book. I enjoyed the premise of the story and travelling along with the character to significant events in time that we have all heard of felt whimsical. I felt the book was well paced and balanced the POVs well; I prefer multiple POV writing so this was a massive plus for me. Character development was done really well; I feel like you really get to know and understand Bea and her decisions, however frustrating some of them were. Oliver's character is as equally developed with insights into his past shaping his present actions and views. I particularly like the differences in passage of time and what that means for each character and how it echoes their individual circumstances. I felt the end was built up well and because of this found it very emotional. It's not often a book makes me cry! Thank you so much for sending me this e-arc, it was an absolute (emotional) pleasure to read.
Profile Image for stargazer.reads.
24 reviews1 follower
January 4, 2026
How do I even explain this book and its beauty! I am a firm lover of Addie Larue and this was just the treat I was looking for! It has its similarities obviously but I feel like this was a much different story.

It was a heartbreaking story about life, loss and love. The journey that the two characters go through, their love for each other and the circumstances of it come to together to make a story I couldn’t put down.

I stayed up until 3 am reading because every chapter left me feeling like I had to know more. The last 20% had me holding my breath and trying not to cry. (Spoiler I definitely cried).

I will say that the ending was VERY similar to Addie Larue. I wish it had ended a bit differently but overall I really enjoyed this book!
Profile Image for Amanda Johnson.
71 reviews
September 9, 2025
I highly recommend this book! It has a similar tone and style to The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, which I personally enjoy. If you're okay with books that share a similar vibe, you'll likely appreciate this one too. However, if Addie LaRue wasn't your thing, this might not be either.

I’m personally a huge fan of time travel romances and cozy mysteries with a magical touch, and this book brought exactly that. The writing was beautifully lyrical, drawing me right into Beatrix’s world and making it feel truly immersive.

I absolutely loved this story and would highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys enchanting, atmospheric reads.

Thank you so much for the ARC :)
Profile Image for Maddie Zuschlag.
243 reviews2 followers
October 12, 2025
2/5

Thank you, NetGalley, for the ARC!

You couldn’t pay me a million dollars to eat oysters from the dookie waters from the River Thames in 1600’s London.

The premise had me interested right away: a time-travel love story with heart, history, and the promise of romance across centuries. But while the setup was intriguing, the execution fell a little flat for me. It’s definitely one of those stories that’s best enjoyed if you don’t think too hard about the logistics- just let the magic happen and don’t ask questions (which, unfortunately, I couldn’t stop doing).

Everything was so surface-level that it somehow managed to make even incredible historical events feel dull. For a book that moves across time, I kept wishing for a little more depth, texture, and emotional weight. I found myself wondering about little things- like why Beatrix sounded like she was from 2025 instead of the 1500s, or how they somehow always knew exactly where to meet up across centuries. And I couldn’t help but notice how very similar it felt to The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. Almost too similar at times, just without quite the same emotional pull.

Still, it’s a quick and heartfelt read with an imaginative concept. If you’re in the mood for something light, romantic, and not too serious, this could be a cozy weekend pick. I just needed a bit more depth.
Profile Image for Kimberley.
251 reviews
November 1, 2025
Thank you to Amy Tordoff, Atria, and NetGalley for the ARC. This is my true opinion of the book.

I found this book very enjoyable and such a beautiful story. I love historical fiction, time travel, and romance, so this was a perfect match. It was such a gripping tale and it even made me cry - which not many books do now. Looking forward to seeing this on the shelves!

The reason I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 is because the first 25% or so was very slow and made me unsure of carrying on. I have to admit I wasn’t gripped until I was a quarter of the way in, but after that I was invested. I think the beginning bounced back and forth too much and too quickly, making it a bit confusing, too.

Overall, however, this book stole my heart and I will be busy in the upcoming days thinking about Beatrix and Oliver and their tragic story.
Profile Image for Jefferz.
195 reviews4 followers
October 25, 2025
A romance story across time mixed with traces of speculative fiction and fantasy, Amy Tordoff’s debut novel All We Have Is Time is an accessible story filled with interesting historical fiction snapshots spread over the course of four hundred years. Time-travelers and immortal beings are two common elements separately, but this book’s unorthodox cross of the two gives it a unique spin and for its characters, different repercussions from its genre’s norm. Easy to follow and generally fast-paced in nature, All We Have Is Time is a safe pick for historical romance readers, though those looking for a strong speculative fiction storyline or deeper introspective character work may find this book underwhelming and bland.

Marketed for fans of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, at first glance All We Have Is Time appears to fly too close to the sun with what is clearly one of its inspirations and at risk of being highly derivative. Both books feature a withdrawn female protagonist cursed by a fantasy being with immortality and walking through history a shadow of a person. Both books also feature a tragic romance with an unexpected love interest who is not what they seem. And despite this book's more speculative fiction lean vs the other’s stronger literary fiction elements, both stories feature similar beginnings and endings; other reviews have highlighted their similarities in far more colorful detail, particularly those that have DNF’d this book early on. Despite having a start that could be a retelling of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue, All We Have Is Time quickly diverges from the other as soon as Oliver is introduced that shifts the story in a completely new direction.

While Beatrix’s immortal condition carries much of the book’s narrative content, I personally found the historical fiction elements of the book to be the biggest highlight and selling point instead. From the rural village of Lancaut, to the rough yet urban excitement of London, to even key moments in American history, Tordoff portrayals of various historic events are varied, visual, and often quite unexpectedly chosen. Given the story’s setting primarily takes place in Britain, certain events are to be expected like World Wars or certain iconic performing arts. However, far outnumbering the predictable historic moments chosen are some that are less common yet still notable, my personal favorite being the Frost Fair of the River Thames. The book smartly avoids coming off as a history lesson that’s consistent with one of the story’s recurring themes of Oliver’s personal interest, and instead is a walk through different romanticized moments that serve as fitting framework for the book’s couple to fill in.

Without giving away any notable spoilers, I also was pleasantly surprised by the backstory of Oliver’s character which was far from what I had been expecting. While not as extensively presented as Beatrix’s perspective, Oliver’s story is where the book gets its speculative fiction edge and provides interesting food for thought. A story involving an immortal falling in love with a mortal is nothing new but the plot mechanism and unique gimmick explaining Oliver’s presence in 1605 London creates an interesting scenario that I haven’t seen explored before, particularly as Beatrix’s journey through history moves towards present day.

While I found the book’s concepts and general storyline interesting, unfortunately the execution and depth of the story stay pretty surface level and simple. The exploration of Beatrix’s isolation and monotonous years, Oliver’s desperation for more time, and the ramifications of their ill-fated bond provided really compelling narrative material that consistently fell flat due to their lackluster handling. Beatrix’s entire backstory with the curse felt very underdeveloped (the fantasy being in particular being sorely underutilized), her journey filled with emotional reactions that could’ve benefited from better setup, not to mention nearly all of Oliver’s backstory and time-traveling mechanism has so many conflicting issues and plot holes that can give veteran scifi/speculative fiction readers a case of trypophobia (spoilers omitted here but included on the full version of this review on my reading blog TheBookGrind).

Additionally, despite finding the read underwhelming, the character development and pacing of the story felt quite rushed and far too fast for the material. As an immortal, Beatrix reflects about how time blends together, her memories of her family painful, and closing herself off to the world. But the reader isn’t given enough time or reflective moments to feel her experiences, the book largely telling rather than showing. The recurring theme of Beatrix having to patiently wait while longing for Oliver over time also lacks the punch it should as the book’s sense of time jumps rushes on or jumps so quickly. These weaknesses likely are not as detrimental to the reading experience for those picking up this book for a historical fiction romance, but for others, the closer you look and pay attention, the bigger the missed opportunities of this story become.

Featuring great concepts and an unexpectedly creative twist with Oliver’s presence and backstory, All We Have Is Time is a respectable book that is highly accessible and has a lot of mainstream appeal. The historical elements are great, there’s enough character moments to satisfy book club style readership without being upsetting, and its romance across time is unique enough to set itself apart. Yet despite Tordoff's polished prose and overall good plotting, I found this to be a disappointing read due to how much better it could’ve been with stronger character writing and deeper introspection. The story consistently feels fine but lacks a sense of urgency, literary touch, or more solid speculative fiction crafting to take it further, the story’s intensity growing as it progresses as does its missed potential. While this book certainly scratches the same narrative itch as The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue and The Ministry of Time as advertised (two of my favorite books I might add), doing so sets up this novel against expectations it more than likely will not meet. That said, this is still a well-intentioned, heartfelt, and light story that’s a great pick for those looking for a quick and easy book to read.

This review is based on a complimentary Advanced Reader Copy provided by Atria Books via Netgalley.

*For more reviews, book lists and reading updates, check out my blog TheBookGrind!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 216 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.