Schizanthus Nerd's Reviews > The Switch
The Switch
by
by

Multiverse!!! So satisfied and happy and my imagination is firing all over the place and I wanna go on that ride again!!! Dialling ... 1-2-3-0-0 ...
I did the Dory thing with The Switch. I was so excited to read it and then before I started I got distracted by "ooh look, a book!". New ones piled up and while this one wasn't forgotten it lay in the middle of my brain trying desperately to climb its way to the top. So I'm late reading this one and kicking myself for it because I could've been living in Jacobus' worlds weeks ago! Well, I'm here now and wow, what a ride!
The moral to this story (option 1): If you see a switch in a red house on a truck that's not connected to electricity yet has a lightbulb turned on inside and there's a sign in Latin next to the switch, maybe pop those words into Google and translate them before you flick the switch. Unless you're Jacobus or Connor. If you are, just go for it!!!
As I was reading this book I kept thinking back to being obsessed with The Butterfly Effect when the first movie was released. For me, this was so many levels above The Butterfly Effect. The characters in this book weren't the only travellers. I travelled with them through all of the worlds and I want to experience it all over again. I don't know the last time I used this word but I kept thinking as I was reading that this book is exquisite. Father and son team A.W. Hill and Nathanael Hill have exploded my brain in such a wonderful way!
It is deep, so deep you could get in over your head if you don't pay attention but if you take the time to read carefully, you'll be rewarded greatly. The way that the knowledge of how travelling works is doled out in bite sized pieces is fantastic because otherwise my brain could have exploded from information overload instead, but as the characters learned more, I learned more. Then each time my brain said, "But hold on. How does that work? Why did that happen?", one of the characters would ask something similar and my answer would come, usually from sweet, adorable, geeky, wise, catcher outfit wearing Gordon.
I know just enough sciencey stuff to be dangerous but not enough to be able to discuss the scientific validity of the events in this book so I'll leave that for a different breed of nerd. However I was given the imagination bone (Huh? It's not a bone?) and from an imagination standpoint, the authors get a jumping up and down ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ from me. As a token of my appreciation I gathered each star from a different world for them and boy, was it awkward carrying them all home!
Some serious thought has gone into the way the universes work in The Switch - which rules apply universally, which rules rely on whether you pulled a switch or not, which parts of you remain you regardless of the universe you're in.
I love a story that whets my appetite and makes me want to learn more. The Switch did that for me. I've had Brian Greene's The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos calling me for way too long and I long to read that and then come back to experience The Switch again, this time as a sciencey-type person.
The moral to this story (option 2): The grass is not always greener on the other side. Who knows whether their grass is green or if they even have grass over there at all?!
In case you can't tell, I loved this book. I loved the characters. I loved the concept. I loved the execution. I love that it got my brain all tingly, wanting to learn. I love that it got my imagination doing gymnastics in my mind. I love the message that our choices have the power to change our world.
I received a copy of this book from NetGalley (thank you so much to NetGalley and Curiosity Quills Press for the opportunity) in exchange for honest feedback.
🗣 And now it's time for a word from our sponsor:
Why does the food always sound so amazing when you're reading?! This time it was a chocolate donut. Now, personally I prefer pink donuts but here I am reading about this supermarket chocolate one and all of a sudden I'm desperately craving it. So, I've decided there's an untapped market out there.
There needs to be a service where food and drink companies make a deal with publishing companies so if you crave food that's in your book you double tap the word/s and that sends an instant message to the service in your area. Someone from that service then drives to your house, knocks on your front door and says something like, "Please enjoy this complementary chocolate donut from the good folks at Krispy Kreme and Curiosity Quills Press."
OK, stay with me. This may sound like an expensive marketing tool but if you think about it, the next time you want a donut you're going to remember that freebie and you're likely to choose that brand over the one that's never done anything nice for you. The same thing could work for TV. Hmm.. [sound of brain cells hissing as they attempt to ignite] * ring, ring * "Hi, is that Shark Tank?" 🦈
I did the Dory thing with The Switch. I was so excited to read it and then before I started I got distracted by "ooh look, a book!". New ones piled up and while this one wasn't forgotten it lay in the middle of my brain trying desperately to climb its way to the top. So I'm late reading this one and kicking myself for it because I could've been living in Jacobus' worlds weeks ago! Well, I'm here now and wow, what a ride!
The moral to this story (option 1): If you see a switch in a red house on a truck that's not connected to electricity yet has a lightbulb turned on inside and there's a sign in Latin next to the switch, maybe pop those words into Google and translate them before you flick the switch. Unless you're Jacobus or Connor. If you are, just go for it!!!
As I was reading this book I kept thinking back to being obsessed with The Butterfly Effect when the first movie was released. For me, this was so many levels above The Butterfly Effect. The characters in this book weren't the only travellers. I travelled with them through all of the worlds and I want to experience it all over again. I don't know the last time I used this word but I kept thinking as I was reading that this book is exquisite. Father and son team A.W. Hill and Nathanael Hill have exploded my brain in such a wonderful way!
It is deep, so deep you could get in over your head if you don't pay attention but if you take the time to read carefully, you'll be rewarded greatly. The way that the knowledge of how travelling works is doled out in bite sized pieces is fantastic because otherwise my brain could have exploded from information overload instead, but as the characters learned more, I learned more. Then each time my brain said, "But hold on. How does that work? Why did that happen?", one of the characters would ask something similar and my answer would come, usually from sweet, adorable, geeky, wise, catcher outfit wearing Gordon.
I know just enough sciencey stuff to be dangerous but not enough to be able to discuss the scientific validity of the events in this book so I'll leave that for a different breed of nerd. However I was given the imagination bone (Huh? It's not a bone?) and from an imagination standpoint, the authors get a jumping up and down ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ from me. As a token of my appreciation I gathered each star from a different world for them and boy, was it awkward carrying them all home!
Some serious thought has gone into the way the universes work in The Switch - which rules apply universally, which rules rely on whether you pulled a switch or not, which parts of you remain you regardless of the universe you're in.
I love a story that whets my appetite and makes me want to learn more. The Switch did that for me. I've had Brian Greene's The Hidden Reality: Parallel Universes and the Deep Laws of the Cosmos calling me for way too long and I long to read that and then come back to experience The Switch again, this time as a sciencey-type person.
The moral to this story (option 2): The grass is not always greener on the other side. Who knows whether their grass is green or if they even have grass over there at all?!
In case you can't tell, I loved this book. I loved the characters. I loved the concept. I loved the execution. I love that it got my brain all tingly, wanting to learn. I love that it got my imagination doing gymnastics in my mind. I love the message that our choices have the power to change our world.
I received a copy of this book from NetGalley (thank you so much to NetGalley and Curiosity Quills Press for the opportunity) in exchange for honest feedback.
🗣 And now it's time for a word from our sponsor:
Why does the food always sound so amazing when you're reading?! This time it was a chocolate donut. Now, personally I prefer pink donuts but here I am reading about this supermarket chocolate one and all of a sudden I'm desperately craving it. So, I've decided there's an untapped market out there.
There needs to be a service where food and drink companies make a deal with publishing companies so if you crave food that's in your book you double tap the word/s and that sends an instant message to the service in your area. Someone from that service then drives to your house, knocks on your front door and says something like, "Please enjoy this complementary chocolate donut from the good folks at Krispy Kreme and Curiosity Quills Press."
OK, stay with me. This may sound like an expensive marketing tool but if you think about it, the next time you want a donut you're going to remember that freebie and you're likely to choose that brand over the one that's never done anything nice for you. The same thing could work for TV. Hmm.. [sound of brain cells hissing as they attempt to ignite] * ring, ring * "Hi, is that Shark Tank?" 🦈
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Reading Progress
August 30, 2017
–
Started Reading
August 30, 2017
– Shelved
September 2, 2017
–
4.0%
""what I'm about to describe is in a whole different category of weird." OK, you've got my interest. Please continue..."
September 6, 2017
–
45.0%
"I've been hearing people singing Kookaburra sits in the old gum tree round-robin style in my head like they tortured us with in school since 41%. Make it stop!! 😱"
September 8, 2017
–
Finished Reading
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Schizanthus
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 22, 2017 06:35AM

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