Lily Tripp: Diary of an Accidental Time Traveller by Amelia Tait
published 2026 (this week)
This is a new book for Young Adults, and that high concept
title gives a pretty good idea of what it’s about. Lily Tripp, your average 13-year-old,
living now in the UK, sometimes goes to sleep and wakes up in a different historical era.
During this book – and I do hope it’s going to be the first of a series – she ends
up in the 17th century, and then in the 1970s. She also reminisces
about visits to other eras.
It is a great idea for a book, and the diary format works
vey well. Lily is a very convincing young woman, and when she goes
time-travelling she is surrounded by her same family, friends and schoolmates –
but they don’t realize they are doubling up, they just think Lily is a bit weird
sometimes. It is very funny and entertaining.
There is no reason given for the travelling, and the mechanics
aren’t explored that closely. (I’m all in favour of that: it’s made up anyway,
you don’t have to convince me.) Maybe all will be explained in a future entry.
The book is full of history, which has been very
well-researched, but obviously also is amusing and entertaining as our heroine
tries to cope, and not get things wrong, or be accused of witchcraft, and hopes to get off with the right boy.
I know Amelia Tait: she is an extraordinarily good
freelance journalist who does those articles that you didn’t know you wanted to
read: what happened to reality show participants, what is the Mandela effect,
how do they choose crisp flavours (well I would always have known I wanted to
read that one), what’s it like to ride in a miniature car. I have long loved
her work, and am very proud of the fact that occasionally when she has needed
an Old Person to talk about how they use technology she has asked me. Blog
readers will be pleased to know that I once made an impassioned case, for use
in her article, that the Paint app be preserved, as I find it a really easy way
to edit the pictures for my entries here. (Yeah, and I think Amelia and I pretty
much saved it between us, I mean it still exists, I am still using it every day
while everyone else has fancy editing software and AI. We nailed it. Or else, perhaps I am a time-travelling computer user, heading back to 1985 with my illos)
You can find some of her work on her Substack
(5) The Waiting
Room | Amelia Tait | Substack
And there is an excellent list of those articles I’m trying
to describe here on her website
While she was writing her book, Amelia did ask me a couple
of questions about being at school in the 1970s. Frankly, she should have asked
me more – not because she got it wrong, she didn’t, but wholly for my own
self-importance. So I am appealing to her now: send Lily back to any of my
eras, and I will give you all the info you need, I have a very good memory. Please note my careful discussion above of schoolbags - I am an expert.
Anyway, this is a hugely enjoyable, very well-written book,
and I look forward to the series.
There used to be a cliché about people saying that they
would like to live in the past – someone would answer ‘yes but you picture yourself
as rich, you wouldn’t want to go back as a servant would you?’ – and most
certainly Amelia has not fallen into that trap at all, the book is very
interesting on the lives of people in service.
I strongly recommend it. It is fun to read, but would also make a great present for
any young person
And now I’m going to ask my readers: if you could
time-travel back to any era, which would you choose? Where would you pick for
Lily Tripp to visit? I will pass on your answers to the author…
17TH Century women – from a girls’ annual from 100 years ago, a 1920s historical story about the era. So double history/time travel!
1972 – from fashion magazines of the era.






Oh Moira, I am beyond touched by this post - thank you SO much! I'm so chuffed you enjoyed the book. Thank you for reading (and writing!!), Amelia xx
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