In
Interzone, Matt Hills writes, "The strengths of this book lie in its own historical research - displayed via a bibliographical list of reading - and in its depiction of an alien race that objectively seeks to record history, the Absolute. [...] Notable for its cubist-inspired fragmentation of perspective, and its
Orwellian clock that strikes 13, this addition to the range's story arc is a satisfying read in its own right." In
Continuum, Alan McKee writes, "Setting her story of time-travelling aliens in the midst of the
Spanish civil war, and using
Picasso's Guernica as a metaphor for the multiple perspectives from which humans see the world around them, Halliday argues that it is precisely the act of making sense - the existence of culture - which defines humanity. More than this, sensemaking is - she argues, necessarily subjective, and an aspiration to 'objectivity' is not only impossible, but undesirable." Piers D. Britton, in
TARDISbound: Navigating the Universes of Doctor Who, describes the book as "one of the most intricate and demanding" of the
Eighth Doctor Adventures, and states "
History 101 digs deep into the heartland concerns of Dr. Who: the flow of time and possibility." ==Notes==