

The Time Traveler´s Wife: The time-altering love story behind the major new TV series
Audrey Niffenegger
Rediscover the extraordinary love story that inspired the major new Sky TV series.
Clare and Henry met when Clare was just six and Henry thirty-six, and were married when Clare was twenty-two and Henry thirty.
Impossible but true.
The Time Traveler's Wife is the international bestselling novel of a time-altering love. Henry is a librarian who suffers from a rare condition where his genetic clock periodically resets, finding himself pulled suddenly into his past or future. Meanwhile, Clare is an artist waiting all her life for her great love Henry to appear. In the face of this force neither can prevent nor control, Henry and Clare's struggle to lead normal lives is both intensely moving and entirely unforgettable.
'Dark, unpredictable, incredibly clever and a modern romance' Grazia
Product Details
About Audrey Niffenegger
Reviews for The Time Traveler´s Wife: The time-altering love story behind the major new TV series
Daily Express
At its core The Time Traveler's Wife is an old-fashioned love story. A terrific book - startlingly original construction
Observer
I was ridiculously entranced by Audrey Niffenegger's big, reckless novel...utterly convincing
Daily Telegraph
Niffenegger exploits the possibilities of her fantasy scenario with immense skill: no wonder this novel has spent weeks on the bestseller lists in the US. This is one of those books that makes you want to eat it up from start to finish
Guardian
Wonky, sexy, incredible
The Times
Pick up Niffenegger's book and you'll experience a visceral thrill that only a few novels provide. An elegy to love and loss
Independent on Sunday
Truly original
Vogue
Magical - memorable...poignant, amusing and intensely moving portrait of a unique relationship - quirky, romantic, and kept the right side of cute
Mail on Sunday
The central story is so strong and touching...ingenious... A rare book
Evening Standard
A sweet, original fantasy - its flights of authorial fancy balanced by down-to-earth characters and the matter-of-fact language
Sunday Telegraph