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3.95 of 5 stars
This book makes no mention of Peter Sis as illustrator, and the back cover credits the front cover art to Cliff Nielsen, instead of Cliff Nelson, a... read full description

reviews

Dec 17, 2009
Matt rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Just barely edged out as my favorite book in the series (right behind "A swiftly Tilting Planet"). Tells a story less concerned with love and justice and all about the hard choices that people (and deities) make in a flawed world.

An out and out retelling of the Biblical Deluge from the point of view of two modern teenagers. Unique in that it makes no apology for all the fantastical stuff the Bible referred to in antediluvian times. Angels getting it own with the village More...
1 comment like (8 people liked it)
Dec 18, 2011
teacup_carousel rated it: 4 of 5 stars
It always amuses me when people say "coming of age story" when what they really mean is "sexual awakening". And don't be confused, there *is* a difference. Take for instance Hayao Miyazaki's 2001 film Spirited Away, this is a great example of a coming of age film. Yes, the protagonist Chihiro does meet a certain dragon/boy she may like more than a friend but this is not what pushes the character development, what pushes her to "grow up" are the lessons she learns ab More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Aug 23, 2007
Alexis rated it: 4 of 5 stars
so... this was the first of all the books which made me realize while i was reading it that it was all christian imagery. i mean, the arc and all - noah... hard to miss, right? and that's what people say about aslan - just a jesus allegory - but i didn't have any christian education as a child, so i missed all of that. and most people say the same "when i was a kid i didn't realize it had all that christian metaphor." which i think means that in effect, it didn't. if we don't know More...
0 comments like (3 people liked it)
Dec 09, 2009
Heather rated it: 4 of 5 stars
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1 comment like (1 person liked it)
Mar 26, 2007
Amanda rated it: 5 of 5 stars
This is the other contender for my favorite Madeleine L'Engle book. I especially love this book because of its version of the biblical story of Noah and the flood, a story that I've heard often and that loses its luster since I spent my entire childhood in Sunday School. L'Engle blends biblical ideas and stories with her own imaginative renderings of that time, like her interpretations of the seraphim and nephilim, mythical creatures like manticores, and her explanation of Noah's daughters' c More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Mar 26, 2009
Jacqueline rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I first read Many Waters as a young adult many years ago. I have been re-reading many L'Engle books the past couple of years, and this one has been hard to get ahold of. (Our large library system only has one copy, and it has had a long hold list.) I finally got my chance and enjoyed revisiting the story.

Many Waters is basically a fictionalized account of the Noah's Ark story from the Bible. Sandy and Dennys Murphy inadvertently disturb one of their father's science projects and More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Aug 16, 2011
Zarah rated it: 3 of 5 stars
This has always been my favorite of the Time Quintet (better known, perhaps, as the Wrinkle in Time series). I read it again just now because – while it’s true that I’ve been wanting to reread it for quite some time – I was cold, and the vast majority of the story is set in a desert. I don’t think it made me any warmer, but oh well.

I hadn’t read Many Waters in such a long time that I couldn’t remember much of anything about it other than what I’ve written above, which is really unusual More...
Mar 26, 2011
Pikachu rated it: 3 of 5 stars
This book is bizarre. Sandy and Dennys accidentally teleport back in time when they jokingly write "take me someplace warm" on one of their father's unfinished experiments. Suddenly, the twins find themselves in antediluvian times, in a place where they are giants, mythical beasts like the manticore and the unicorn are commonplace, people keep tiny dog-sized mammals as pets, and angels walk freely among man.

I know that sounds like it has the potential to be quite bad, which i More...
Jul 17, 2010
Rachel rated it: 3 of 5 stars
This story, the fourth in Madeleine L'Engle's Time quintet, focuses primarily on Dennys and Sandy, the Murphy twins and siblings of Meg and Charles Wallace (characters from A Wrinkle in Time and L'Engle's other stories in this series). After inadvertently messing around with one of their parents' many intricate scientific experiments, the twins find themselves transported instantaneously to a distant location. To explain more would be to give away secrets of the plot, so suffice it to say the tw More...
Jun 29, 2010
John rated it: 4 of 5 stars
In a departure from the main characters of the first three books, Madeleine L'Engle's Many Waters follows Sandy and Dennys Murry, the twin brothers of the Murry family that had little to do in the first three novels. While this was unexpected, L'Engle recaptures a great deal of the mythic tone in this novel that was so clearly present in the first of her Time novels.

And it is precisely because of that mythic quality that I like this novel so much. L'Engle, who sends her protagonists More...
Nov 02, 2009
Max rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Three or four stars...I wish they had halves...does it matter? Well, I've had this book for many years but never read it. I bought it who knows when because it is part of the series of 'A Wrinkle in Time'. I still remember the wonder I had when I read 'Wrinkle', and plan to read it and the others of the series again some day.

'Waters' was enjoyable, and not dependent on the previous books to understand. The twins, Sandy and Dennys, are now 15, and were known to be doers and the pr More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Aug 10, 2011
Evelyn rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I'd read this book many years ago, so distant that it felt as though I was reading it for the first time. Madeleine L'Engle is a very good author, but there is something about her books that makes it difficult to imagine yourself reading them. Maybe it's the science that weighs just as heavy as the fantasy. Whatever it is, once you get started finishing is the easy part. The description of antediluvian life was fascinating, as all things from distant history are. Differences between the nep More...
Mar 06, 2011
Mari rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Probably one of my favorite of the series. Many Waters was L'Engle taking a rather different approach to telling the story of the Murrys, and even did it in the perspective of Sandy and Dennys as opposed to Meg and Charles Wallace. I had been looking forward to the book because it would involve the twins much more than the books usually did.

The twins weren't the only differences in the book, however. Even with the two instances of a tesseracting occurrence, the traveling didn't get ver More...
Nov 10, 2007
Qt rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This is the third book in the Wrinkle in Time quartet, and, like the others, it has an unusual and intriguing mix of spirituality, quantum mechanics, philosophy, and fantasy. It's not your typical novel--no slam-bang action, no climactic ending--it's more of a "thinking" book. Some of the parts were sad or a bit unsettling to me, but that's a shortcoming of my own--not the book's, as it was really well-written and beautifully done :-)
2 comments like (1 person liked it)
Oct 25, 2011
Marie rated it: 5 of 5 stars
I have read this book numerous times from adolescence through adulthood. As much as I love Meg and Charles Murray, it is this book, which focuses on the secondary characters of their twin brothers Sandy and Dennys, that I find myself returning to again and again. It is one of my favorites from Madeleine L'Engle. I think it is because of the theme of growing up and experiencing deep love and romance (the love triangle with the twins and Yalith) that I love it so much. I had a huge crush on the tw More...
May 16, 2010
Dreamybee rated it: 3 of 5 stars
I don't really have too much to say about this book. I liked it a lot better than #3 in the series, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, but I still didn't love it. I understand why L'Engle's books endure-I think she does a great job of bringing sophisticated science to young readers in a way that is interesting-I can see how some kid might decide she wants to be a physicist or a mathematician after reading some of L'Engle's books, and I think that's great; however, I don't think she's a very good writer More...
Apr 20, 2010
Ali rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Still reflecting on this one. It's so lyrical, thoughtful, and strange. Nothing like the other Time books. Though L'Engle uses simple language and descriptions, the world she paints has so much contrast and so many unexpected elements that I was wholly immersed, thinking about it even when I wasn't reading - and it's been awhile since that happened.

If you're anticipating this to be a piece of preachy historical Bible-fiction because of the subject matter, you'll be surprised, as I wa More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Nov 15, 2011
Leah rated it: 5 of 5 stars
If you ever heard the story of Noah’s ark in Sunday school you will love this book. Fans of A Wrinkle in Time will appreciate this opportunity to get to know the twins, and become acquainted with the personalities of the bible characters many readers have known since early childhood. Like the rest of the stories in Madeleine L’Engle’s Time Quartet, Many Waters involves themes of skepticism that can be enjoyed by adults, alongside fantasy characters such as unicorns that will capture the imaginat More...
Oct 30, 2011
Margot rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This was by far my favorite of L'Engle's Time series. Sandy and Dennys, the Murry twins and most normal of the family, accidentally travel back to biblical times when people lived for 700 years, and seraphim, nephilim, and unicorns walked among men. And God is just about to send a flood that will wipe out the entire human race.

Yes, Sandy and Dennys have landed in the time of Noah and the Ark. And they must help his family during this "time of change" when the future seems v More...
Feb 25, 2011
Jen rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I think I've been under a rock for the past 20 years. I was unaware there was a fourth book to the series, and I loved Madeleine L'Engle growing up. I read her like a religion. So it was like finding out your long lost friend actually lives down the street to find the book.

Sandy and Dennys were always the most boring of the family. They seemed the normal ones that never got to do anything and honestly didn't seem that upset about it. They liked being normal. So it was nice to see them More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Feb 02, 2011
Zoe rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Hadn't read this one in years but picked it up a while ago when I saw the new edition. Finally got round to reading it again and I have to say, not her best work. The slice-of-life interaction between Sandy and Dennys at the beginning seems stilted and like a hokey family drama. The characterisation isn't as strong as it is in her non-fantasy books, with characters having basically one or two dimensions. And yet the interesting ideas - virtual particles, the effect of the observer on the thing b More...
Apr 10, 2010
Deanna rated it: 2 of 5 stars
I started reading this out loud to my boys, but after a chapter I quickly realized that that was not going to work. This book, much to my surprise, was an adult book.

In this book the Murray twins get transported back in time to the days of Noah right before the flood. The daughters of men are cavorting with the nephilum and it is quite descriptive! These "experienced" (they actually say some other words) girls come after our Murray twins and it gets a little racy. Also More...
2 comments like (1 person liked it)
Dec 06, 2010
Jessica rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I read this book every year on my birthday. I wasn't going to include it in my Good reads because it is kind of a goofy tradition, plus it didn't totally achieve the purpose of this project--to read or relearn about as many young adult novels as possible. I was desperate for one more novel (sheepish face) and I did read it this semester, so I'm going to qualify this book. I read this every year, and while I don't necessarily think this is L'Engle's best book, I enjoy how she tries to tie the bib More...
May 17, 2009
Rachel rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This Time Quartet book seems not to fit in really well with the other three, but I liked it very much. For one thing, it follows the twins, Sandy and Dennys, who were hardly noticed in the other three books except that they were described as the most "normal" of the Murry children. For another, they were not granted some great mission, like Meg and Charles Wallace in the other three Time books. It was much more like the Wizard of Oz, where the boys, having stumbled into a different More...
Nov 05, 2011
Becky rated it: 2 of 5 stars
After The Swiftly Tilting Planet, I had high expectations for this next book in the L'Engle Space and Time series. Unfortunately, I found this book rather tedious to get through. The premise is that Meg Murphy's twin brothers accidentally walk into their father's science experiment and find themselves in Biblical times...like pre-history Biblical times. I didn't love the plot, although how she explains those mysterious Nephtilum of the Bible is quite interesting. It also felt like she reverted b More...
Dec 27, 2011
Kathryn rated it: 3 of 5 stars
This was my least favorite of all of the Time Quartet books. It stars Sandy and Dennys Murry, the least remarkable of all of the Murry children. At the beginning of the novel, they stumble into one of their father's experiments and find themselves transported to a strange, foreign place. At first, the twins are convinced that they are on another planet, but gradually learn that they have been dumped into the middle of the biblical story of Noah and the Ark.

I did enjoy this particular v More...
Apr 21, 2009
Rob rated it: 4 of 5 stars
The Murry twins, Sandy and Dennys, get transported back to the time of Noah, just before the flood. I have to say, whatever you expect that to be like, L'Engle probably still has a surprise or two for you. Very good writing,. as always. THe plot is somewhat unsatisfactory to me towards the end, though. Maybe she addresses this in the An Acceptable Time. Doesn;t look like it, though.

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Well, I know where Pullman g More...
Jul 17, 2009
Robyn rated it: 5 of 5 stars
It is hard to do any justice to this author's books--they are so unique, so deep, so well-written. This one is about 2 modern day boys going back to Noah's time and it is so dusty, so hot, so gritty; she was able to portray colors, feelings, sensations, emotions in this interestingly set book. Her capacity to use the English language is amazing and that's what I love about her books, as well as this description which I did not write: "L'Engle's mystical mix of science fiction and fantasy, t More...
Sep 30, 2011
Maria rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This book was interesting and fun to read. The author gives a very unique meaning to this book that makes you want to read more. This book is based on science fiction, fantasy, romance, physics that makes you want to take out the history book or science book and say that's in my book. What I really liked about this book is that it tells the original story of noahs' arc and twisted it up a bit to where Sandy and Denny are involved but not changing history. This book has unicorns, manticore More...
Dec 28, 2009
JJ rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I read this book for a 5th grade book report and made a diorama (anyone else remember those?). MANY WATERS is a large departure from the other Murray books, being about Sandy and Dennys rather than Meg and Charles Wallace. The scale of their coming-of-age is more intimate and less fantastic than Meg and Charles Wallace's and much more sexy.

I did not realise L'Engle considered herself a Christian writer--I had always thought of her as science-fiction as a child. However, upon rereadin More...