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Obama’s summer reading list has dropped – and it includes my favourite new book

The 2024 list includes the sci-fi romance Kaliane Bradley’s The Ministry of Time

Daisy Lester
Tuesday 13 August 2024 12:35 EDT
The former President’s literary list is as eclective as ever
The former President’s literary list is as eclective as ever (AP/iStock/The Independent )

Barack Obama sharing his reading list has become somewhat of a tradition. With the exception of a couple of years (he was President after all), he’s shared his book recommendations every summer since 2009.

Thanks to their diverse nature, spanning both fiction and non-fiction, his literary compilation is eagerly anticipated. Giving plenty of reading inspiration for the last few weeks of summer (and beyond), Obama’s list for 2024 has just dropped.

From a novel inspired by The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (James by Percival Everett) and a debut following teenage girls taking part in a boxing competition in Nevada (Headshot by Rita Bullwinkel) to an account of the golden age of American basketball (There’s Always This Year: On Basketball And Ascension by Hanif Abdurraqib) and a deep dive on the impact of the Age of Exploration and the British Empire, the compilation is characteristically eclectic.

In fact, even my favourite new release this summer has made the cut: Kaliane Bradley’s The Ministry of Time. The innovative novel is set in the very near future when the British government have got its hands on a time machine. Mysteriously, they’ve brought back five “expats” from history and assigned them “bridges” to assess how they acclimatise.

It’s a romance, comedy, sci-fi thriller and historical novel all rolled into one – and it seems like Obama loved it just as much as I did.

'The Ministry of Time’ by Kaliane Bradley, published by Sceptre

ministry of time.png
  • Best: Time travel romance

Kaliane Bradley’s The Ministry of Time is a romance, time travel thriller and romantic comedy novel all rolled into one.

Set in the near future, the British government has got its hands on a time travel portal and as part of an undisclosed mission, they’ve brought back five “expats” from history. Among the time travellers is Commander Gore, a 38-year-old Navy officer from the 19th century, who was part of Sir John Franklin’s doomed expedition to the Arctic. In real life, he died in 1847, but in Bradley’s genre-bending tome, he’s forced to acclimatise to the 21st century, while our nameless narrator, a disaffected civil servant, is assigned as Gore’s “bridge” to help him settle in.

Grappling with everything from aeroplanes, dating apps, the British Empire and iPhones, what follows is a girl-meets-boy (or Victorian-Arctic-explorer) love story and Doctor Who-esque thriller. Laugh-out-loud funny and a surprisingly powerful meditation on the climate crisis, it’s above all exciting, fun and a good old-fashioned page-turner that you’ll recommend to all your friends. So it’s really no surprise that Obama has it on his summer reads list.

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Looking for more book recommendations? We’ve rounded up the best new releases for 2024

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