The Last Universe

by William Sleator

Hardcover, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

272

Collection

Publication

Harry N. Abrams (2005), Paperback, 224 pages

Description

When her desperately ill older brother insists that she take him into their mysterious backyard garden, designed by their quantum physicist great uncle, fourteen-year-old Susan discovers that things are not always what they seem.

User reviews

LibraryThing member tjsjohanna
Interesting treatment of quantum physics for a younger audience.
LibraryThing member inkdrinker
Some books grab you by the seat of your pants and drag you around until you turn the last page gasping for breath. Others are slow smoldering burn which sustains throughout with subtle twists and turns. William Sleator's book The Last Universe is a combination of both. It begins as a slow burn,
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building a plot which has some small shocks slipping a sense of intrigue under the reader’s radar. About half way through the book the tables turn. The reader suddenly finds a set of teeth clamped around their imagination and their pulse quickens.

The Last Universe is the story of a brother and sister who live in a house with a very odd garden. The oldest of the siblings (Gary) is sick and seems to be slowly dying. His sister Susan (the narrator) is healthy but tied to home in order to help her parents with her brother. Everyday Gary forces Susan to take him for walks in the garden. Susan dreads these walks because she finds the garden creepy. Once strange things begin to happen in the garden she becomes even more frightened, but Gary continues to force her to take him on these walks. He seems to know something about the garden which he is keeping from Susan.

As the story progresses the tension builds and the garden starts to change their lives in ways that are completely unpredictable. At this point in the book the pace of the plot starts to become breakneck.

Sleator handles the style of the writing in his usual straight forward fashion, but he once again proves why he is a master of young adult speculative fiction. While this one many not hit the heights of his first breakthrough The House of Stairs, the ideas and the general plot presented here are definitely worth the time and the money.
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LibraryThing member storyteller1020
This book, years later, stays in my mind as a great light science fiction read. Makes you think about parallel worlds and the effects of our choices.
LibraryThing member Fledgist
This is a fast-paced, YA story told from the perspective of a teenaged girl who runs into the many-worlds hypothesis (and quantum physics) in a direct and alarming way. She finds that the maze in her family's garden can alter her brother's fate, and her own in an extraordinary way. Altogether an
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enjoyable short novel.
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Awards

Language

Original publication date

2005

Physical description

224 p.; 7.8 inches

ISBN

0810958589 / 9780810958586
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