Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

A Thousand Pieces of You
A Thousand Pieces of You
A Thousand Pieces of You
Ebook336 pages5 hours

A Thousand Pieces of You

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Cloud Atlas meets Orphan Black in this epic dimension-bending trilogy by New York Times bestselling author Claudia Gray about a girl who must chase her father's killer through multiple dimensions.

Marguerite Caine's physicist parents are known for their groundbreaking achievements. Their most astonishing invention, called the Firebird, allows users to jump into multiple universes—and promises to revolutionize science forever. But then Marguerite's father is murdered, and the killer—her parent's handsome, enigmatic assistant Paul— escapes into another dimension before the law can touch him.

Marguerite refuses to let the man who destroyed her family go free. So she races after Paul through different universes, always leaping into another version of herself. But she also meets alternate versions of the people she knows—including Paul, whose life entangles with hers in increasingly familiar ways. Before long she begins to question Paul's guilt—as well as her own heart. And soon she discovers the truth behind her father's death is far more sinister than she expected.

A Thousand Pieces of You explores an amazingly intricate multi-universe where fate is unavoidable, the truth elusive, and love the greatest mystery of all.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperTeen
Release dateNov 4, 2014
ISBN9780062278982
Author

Claudia Gray

Claudia Gray is the pseudonym of New Orleans-based writer Amy Vincent, the author of the New York Times bestselling Evernight series. She has worked as a lawyer, a journalist, a disc jockey, and an extremely poor waitress. Her grandparents' copy of Mysteries of the Unexplained is probably the genesis of her fascination with most things mysterious and/or inexplicable.

Read more from Claudia Gray

Related to A Thousand Pieces of You

Titles in the series (3)

View More

Related ebooks

YA Science Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for A Thousand Pieces of You

Rating: 3.9927007299270074 out of 5 stars
4/5

137 ratings42 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "Now I know grief is a whetstone. It sharpens all your love, all your happiest memories, into blades that tear you apart from within. Something has been torn out from inside that will never be filled up, not ever, no matter how long I love. They say 'time heals,' but even now, less than a week after my father's death, I know that is a lie. What people really mean is that eventually you'll get get used to the pain. You'll forget who you were without it; you'll forget what you looked like without your scars. This, I think, is the boundary line of adulthood. Not the crap they claim it is-- graduating high school or losing your virginity or getting your first apartment or whatever. You cross the boundary the first time you're changed forever. You cross it the first time you know you can never go back." - A Thousand Pieces of You by Claudia Gray

    Overall, I am pretty impressed with this book. It was sweet and unique in all the right ways. I was skeptical in the first few chapters with all of the science talk that made my eyes feel like it was going to cross, but thankfully that was just there to set up the scene for everything that was going on. I really enjoyed the world building, the character development, the plot progression, and the ending. I am really excited for this series to continue, and I just hope it will be as good as the first. Because of the different dimensions, I think this book will appeal to fans of a lot of different genres. It's contemporary, but there's fantasy, dystopian, and even some historical. I think this book is a must read for everyone, and I am definitely adding it to my "2014 favorites" list.

    For my full review, check out my blog .
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    On a scale of Schrödinger’s cat to physics this book is the wonders of interdimensional travel.I didn’t think it was possible to fall in love with Paul and Theo simultaneously as fast as I did. I totally dig Theo’s bad boy, nerd, ladies man vibe but then there was Paul’s timid intelligence that I am still totally hung up on. Don’t even get me started on Pavel, Russian Paul was ten times better with his chivalry and careful confidence. Claudia Gray’s writing is impeccably descriptive with equal parts wit and excitement. I delved into her multiverse with open arms and loved the direction she took with the concept, believable in the most fantastic way.The physics isn’t bad either. It’s only mentioned on, like, page ten and then referenced briefly the rest of the book but I can kind of understand how energy can be quantum entangled with the firebird which acts like Schrödinger’s cat to “teleport” the wearer to different dimensions. There are a couple creative liberties which have been taken assuming that is the science behind the firebird but I did immensely enjoy reading this novel despite the physics induced headache it caused.I would recommend this book to lovers of physics, fantasy, and believers in the multiverse.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The level of predictability in this book surpassed even MY expectations. No, that's not a good thing. The romance was interesting and well-developed; I enjoyed Paul's character. But the author was VERY heavy-handed with the plot. There were almost no surprises whatsoever. The ending was almost cringe-worthy. I'll still be reading book 2, if only because I still like the idea of multiverses, and at least the love triangle is done. For now.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing twist to science

    Captivating with the plot of science, family, and love. I couldn't put it down. Looking forward to the next of the series.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book! Even though it had a love triangle, I didn't dislike it for once. The circumstances of the triangle make it less annoying and make Marguerite's doubts more realistic. As both Theo and Paul forget sometimes who they are, part of her doesn't know who she likes, because even though all parallel versions of both young men are similar, there's something unique about each of them. The fact that she is not madly in love with either and that her feelings and doubts are presented in a much more mature way than usual also helped.

    I found the way that the parallel universes work in this trilogy very interesting. Any person who uses the Firebird can only travel to a universe in which this person exists and is currently alive. The mind of the traveler is transferred to their parallel body and takes control of it, suppressing that body's mind.

    I only disliked two things. The synopsis says space- and time-bending and there's actually no time travel at all. What happens is that some of the parallel universes are less advanced than ours and others have futuristic technology, so it seems as if the characters have traveled back or forwards in time, but nobody travels to the past or the future, nor is it mentioned that it's even possible. Not in this book anyway. It's a trilogy, so who knows what secrets will be discovered in the next two books.

    The other was that I would expect someone else to question Paul's guilt as well. The problem was that we don't get the impression that Paul is the killer, because the book doesn't give us enough reasons to believe this. Seeing as this is a key aspect of the plot, it was a bit unfortunate that Mr. Caine's death -or rather what his family knows of it- wasn't explained more.

    I'm looking forward to reading the rest of the series, because travelling through universes adds something interesting to the usual espionage plot. I've put a word in spoiler tags because it reveals an important part of the general plot of the trilogy that is only discovered at the end. I couldn't leave it out of the review though, because it's the main reason why I want to continue reading this book series. As great as the plot was, what I found the most interesting about this trilogy is this twist and the possible consequences of it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I won a copy of this book through the Goodreads Giveaway.This book was entertaining from start to finish. I think it may push people away because of all the scientific talk throughout the book. However the MC, Marguerite, isn't a scientist like the rest of the people in her life, so she manages to explain things in terms most would understand. Thus, it is easy to follow along and comprehend how things work. And of course travelling through all those different dimensions is fascinating. It makes you think of what your own alternate dimensions might contain.There is plenty of adventure, and rather interesting sub plots in this book. The characters are all great because I never could quite trust Paul or Theo, the two boys she travels with. It's a perfect mix of complicated characters and a difficult multi-dimensional travel mission.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Marguerite Caine is an aspiring artist who happens to have physicist parents. These physicists have made groundbreaking discoveries, including inventing a device called the Firebird that can take a person into one of the infinite parallel universes that exist. Unfortunately, this revolutionary invention makes them a target for opportunists. Paul, a graduate student who earned the trust of the scientists and Marguerite, seems to have murdered Marguerite's father and escaped with their invention into on of the multitudes of universes to escape the law. Marguerite and another grad student have to follow Paul through these dimensions and bring him to justice.Based on the description, you might assume that this book is an action packed thriller, but you would be very wrong. This is a romance through and through, which I don't have a problem with, but it would have been nice to know beforehand. Like a typical teen novel, a love triangle forms and troubles our heroine, but then turns into a love square. The romance isn't terrible. I like how the different romances develop, but not always how they end. The science fiction takes a backseat to the romance, but is still intriguing. Travel to the parallel universes is something that I don't read about often, so I was excited to see this author's take. When travelling to these other dimensions, a person takes over the body of the version of themselves in the universe. The traveler has no memories of their alternate life, so they have to find out more about their life and fake like they are the version that belongs there. (Although there are convenient inconsistencies that help forward romances.) This is an interesting take and takes away the confusion of having two of the same person in one dimension. I loved the different dimensions and looking at the different ways civilization, technology, and pop culture developed. Some dimensions aren't very different from this one. Others are drastically different. My favorite was the one that seemed to be a century behind due to slow development and alternate history.I had numerous problems with the novel. A lot of technical questions are avoided because Marguerite is an artist with little to no knowledge of the science. This is a bit of a cop out and allows the author to create the science fiction without fleshing out specifically how or why it happens. I had a big problem with Marguerite assuming Paul killed her father on no evidence at all. Is it so much to ask that some characters have half a brain and ask some questions before jumping to huge conclusions? Also, Paul and Marguerite are in love in all of the dimensions they go to. It stands to reason that this would not be the case in all dimensions because one or the other wouldn't exist or might be evil or simply living in different parts of the world or one of them might be dead. However, they seem to be in love because they are fated to be together forever. I personally find fate incredibly boring because it doesn't bring free will or the circumstances I mention into account and also does not mesh with the scientific aspects of the novel. The true villain of the piece is revealed to be an evil and young version of Steve Jobs. He's one dimensional caricature, practically twirling his mustache and tying a girl to some train tracks while he swims in his mountains of dirty money. This aspects was ham handed and boring to read,The overall concepts were much more interesting than the actual story. Many aspects simply didn't mesh well together. There were a lot more things I had a problem with than I enjoyed. I enjoy Claudia Gray's work and will continue to, but this was a miss for me. I won't be continuing the series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Marguerite’s parents have invented a device – the Firebird – that allows travel throughout the multiverse. The multiverse is a possible set of hypothetical universes also known as parallel or alternate universes.As the story opens, Marguerite’s father is murdered and the prime suspect is Paul, a physics graduate student and her father’s assistant. He steals the Firebird and jumps to another universe. With the help of friend Theo, Marguerite chases Paul through the multiverse and along the way learns much about herself, her relationship with Paul and Theo, and who really wants control of the Firebird.YA is not my usual scifi genre, but I’m a sucker for time-travel and alternate universe stories regardless of whether or not I’m the target audience. I picked this one up on a whim after gazing at the beautiful cover and was under the impression that it was primarily science fiction.YA always has its share of teen angst, and that’s ok. What I wasn’t expecting in this book was a lot of romance. At first I was a little annoyed, but the writing was good and the underlying story was holding my interest. I enjoyed the world-building in the different universes, and it was enough for me to almost overlook the inclusion of a love triangle. As much as that device is overused in YA books, and it seemed unnecessary at first, it did work in the end due to a couple of plot twists.The story is narrated by Marguerite and we view the different universes through her eyes. There aren’t a lot of technical details, and this is science fiction only because characters are able to jump to parallel universes. When they arrive in the new universe they temporarily take over the body of the person who actually belongs there but how the Firebird works isn’t explained.This is the first book of a new trilogy, but it is a complete story with an ending and no cliffhanger. It was enjoyable, escapist reading that I liked a lot more than I expected to.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Meg is the artist daughter of two brilliant scientists. When one of them is killed through sabotage, Meg sets off on an alternate-reality-crossing journey to hunt down the man she believes is the killer. But nothing’s as it seems, as she quickly discovers. The Russian royalty AU was quite enjoyable, and the usual romantic triangle is further complicated because Meg falls in love with two versions of the same man; basically breezy YA.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book had it all - sci-fi, romance, historical fiction, dimension travel (almost wrote time travel and caught myself), surprise twists, a great female protagonist and good settings. I really enjoyed it and considered it a couldn't put it down kind of a book. A tour de force! (Always wanted to write that.)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was absolutely BRILLIANT!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Listen, this was exactly as it said it was: super fluffy romance with some dimensional traveling. The science was shoddy, the plot rather predictable, but goddamn if I'm not super weak for transcendent love sagas and all that fluff.
    I have a feeling I wouldn't have enjoyed this as much as I did if I had read it because I listened to it and the narrator was an absolute delight. I also loved the parts of Russia which, yes may have seemed rather indistinguishable from other parts of Europe but a history lesson would show you that the royal Russian family in the era that dimension was in would have been.... pretty indistinguishable from other royal families. Basically what I'm saying is the Russian part was my favourite but I really enjoyed this book. It was light, not really logical, and just a fun romance.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A Thousand Pieces of You took me longer to read than expected, but it’s not the book’s fault – in a mad dash for a train the book and I were separated and it landed ungracefully in the carpark. Luckily my boyfriend, who had dropped me off, was able to go back and rescue it, but as a result the book and I were separated for a few days. Though I was a bit iffy about it I was glad to be reunited.A Thousand Pieces of You was an addictive read. Had we not been separated, it wouldn’t have taken me nearly as long to get through it. Right from the very start we are thrown into a high paced read. 17-year-old Marguerite’s scientist father has just been murdered, his grad student Paul has destroyed his files and taken off, making him look pretty guilty, and – oh yeah – did I mention he took off into the next dimension? Marguerite’s brilliant parents have discovered the existence of multiple dimensions and better yet, how to travel between them. But they have since been betrayed by Paul, who has killed Marguerite’s dad, deleted the data and taken the Firebird (the device that allows the travel) and Marguerite and her parents’ other grad student Theo decide its up to them to chase him through, using their own prototype Firebirds. This begins a chase through parallel dimensions, some vastly different to our own and some very similar. Sounds pretty good right? I thought so. As a science student, albeit not physics but still science, I was intrigued and excited to start this, especially as I had seen some very favourable ratings (I didn’t want to read the reviews before I started). Unfortunately, I found myself annoyed by the fact that Marguerite had no interest and knew hardly anything about the amazing scientific discoveries her parents had made, unless it was relevant to the plot and she had to remember something she once I heard. I was kinda disappointed, mainly because I realised there were very few young women in YA, paranormal or contemporary, who had any interest in science – most prefer writing or art, which is fine, but I would love to read about someone who loves science, not someone who stumbles upon science and falls into it with no real understanding. That’s just me, though.The romance was … strange. And confusing. A love triangle is hinted, which is enough to annoy me, but it’s not exactly what you think it’s going to be – especially when it turns into a love square. I also thought it caused Marguerite to forget her goal and let herself be easily lead astray, which lead to an extremely stagnant three week stint in Russia that felt unnecessary as that whole fast pace that I was enjoying completely halted. I’ve seen this happen before and it’s so disappointing, because we’re all caught up in an exciting chase, in this case across dimensions, which all of a sudden slides into a sudden halt, does a 360 and focuses on the romance. A super confusing one at that. I have so many questions about the ethics of Marguerite inhabiting a body that made be her in another dimension but is not exactly hers and hence doing what she wants with it. Regardless of whether she thinks her host would want it or not, I feel like there was a line crossed there. As well as how, when she was in Russia, she could speak in three languages easily but didn’t know her way around the big house. She knew how her host body felt about some things but had no idea about other things. The knowledge she would get when she changed dimensions did not seem to be consistent unless, again, it was relevant to the plot.I know I have a few complaints but it was a fairly quick and easy read, it flowed fairly well and was fast paced and exciting (if you forget the Russia bit that is) but I still have a lot of questions about the logistics of the multiverse and there were inconsistencies. It is a complicated web that Gray has woven and I admit, I am intrigued to see where it goes next, even though I didn’t really want to get into another series (there’s just so many!). A three and a half star read, with potential.  
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In this book’s context, time travel isn’t yet possible but gallivanting through a multiverse of parallel worlds is, which turns out to be at least as cool. Marguerite Caine’s parents have invented a still nascent and not yet fully tested technology that allows users to jump into the lives of their alternate selves in universes that branched off from our own by taking different directions sometime in the past. Marguerite's focus has been more on art than science, but that changes when her father is murdered by one of the two handsome graduate students who have been helping with her parent’s project. The killer escapes to another dimension before police can get involved and Marguerite impulsively takes off after him, tracking him through several universes with the help of the other handsome graduate student. The multiverse aspect of the story is phenomenal and the basic storyline--main character jumping in and out of multiple realities, taking up her alternate lives in those worlds while trying to find and kill her father’s murderer--kept me utterly enthralled. The universes Marguerite travels through take her to a grim, gray London with technology far more advanced than our own, a present day but pre-industrial Russia still ruled by resplendent Romanovs, and an Earth where land mass has already been drastically reduced by climate change and the alternate Marguerite lives with her parents in an experimental underwater community. While the settings are fascinating and well drawn, another major part of the plot is a love triangle romance that weakened the story for me because it felt implausible, forced and awkward. Then again, I’m several decades beyond the YA demographic so it might read differently for someone younger. I enjoyed the other aspects of the story so much that I read it almost straight through, and since A Thousand Pieces of You is the first book of a trilogy I will definitely be checking out the sequels.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I was at first wondering whether I was going to enjoy this as much as I did, due to the love triangle that was apparent early on. Though I was hoping to see the protagonist jump to more dimensions, I'm interested to see what happens as the series progresses. This definitely reminded me of All Our Yesterdays.

    Enjoyed this, and liked it more the further I progressed!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I have picked up several time travel books recently. Most of them have been duds. I was about ready to give up on reading these types of books for a while. That is until I picked up this book. Instantly I was drawn into the story and the characters. The past was the main focus of the story but it was strong and made sense for the future. Also, I did not hate the romance that was featured in this story. It did not overtake the story and it actually worked with the story. The world that Marguerite travelled back in time to came alive and was believable. Which for this I am very happy about. I am familiar with Cloud Atlas. I watched it and thought it was alright. It is one of those movies that you have to really just sit and watch and not get up and focus all your energy on or you could easily get confused. None of this was true for this book. You can just sit back and enjoy reading this book. The ending was nice. I look forward to reading the next book in this series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Having read several of Claudia Gray's previous books with mixed results, I was very curious to see how she would tackle the latest YA trend: parallel universes. The verdict? A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU is my favorite Claudia Gray novel yet.Comparing A THOUSAND PIECES OF YOU (ATPOY) to other recent YA novels about parallel universes, the one that is the most similar is Anna Jarzab's TANDEM. Both books feature protagonists whose parents are involved in exploring these parallel universes, have love triangles with different versions of the same guy, and must impersonate royalty in one universe. The edge definitely goes to ATPOY though since Marguerite travels to multiple universes and the characters are much stronger.Another plus about ATPOY is that because the POV is from a non-scientist, I didn't have to sift through tons of theoretical physic discussions regarding parallel universes. There were a few straightforward, simple explanations that left me feeling like I understood what was going on but I was never bogged down by explanations.And the romance was pretty good too. Lots of great twists and genuine heartache. I do wish some of the flashbacks in the first half of the book were left out. I understand the need for character back story to explain the connection between characters, but they did slow the pace down for me. Still, overall ATPOY was a great read and I'll definitely be looking forward the rest of the Firebird trilogy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    4.5 stars Okay, cover snob warning ahead. I was first drawn to it because of the gorgeous cover art and then I read the synopsis and I have always been interested in the concept and fiction of alternate realities. The suspense in this one is well set up. With Marguerite (Meg's) dad recently deceased, and her having grown up to a certain extent with the suspsect of the murders--Paul. Her and her crush Theo, who also was a lab assistant and around her and her family so much, take out to hunt down Paul as he stole the device that makes traveling to the parallel universes possible. Theo, a physicist himself had tinkered with old prototypes and they were able to use that to chase him. We begin to see that things are more complicated than they seem on the surface. She has memories with Paul where he seems so kind and tender. There are also hints of a love triangle that I wasn't sure that I wanted to see played out but also just had to know about my suspicions. Theo, while he seems like a great guy with good intentions, we find out that as smart as he is, he is also got a wild side. Paul, as we see in the 2nd time jump also has a lot more to him than the surface. I ended up loving the romance and can't wait to see how it progresses. Though it does bring up a lot of ethical dimensional travel questions that I thought was really well done. Some of the worlds they travel to almost exactly mirror the dimension they started with, changes being a little less or more tech while others leave Meg jumping into a Meg that is a russian princess. This was actually my favorite time because of the romantic themes here and how it played out. But each Meg, Theo and Paul as well as Meg's parents and whether they are alive or not changes. So if Meg falls deeply for one of the guys, but he is a different version than the one she knew in her home dimension, is she stealing from the Meg in that dimension, and how much of that guy is the same and different? Can the romance travel with each of their jumps and the different versions of themselves? It was delicious. I did appreciate the different ways that technology, the environment as well as social leaders have stayed the same or changed in each dimension jump. One was a semi-aquatic world, another not nearly as advanced and from a different cultural stand point, another set in London. Each world was well thought out and believable. The world building was both understandable but over my head if that makes any sense. The family was physicists and while Meg couldn't understand it all, we got to see it through her understanding, which at times was still over my head, but better than if she also understood all that Theo, Paul and her parents did. (Don't ask about that cat in the box had me snickering because I have seen science nerds debate such things) The ending was good, but I am totally excited to read more and see where things go once all is revealed in this one. Bottom Line: Engrossing and well done book about parallel universes with a surprising romance.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I got a copy of this through Edelweiss to review. Previously I had read Gray’s Evernight series, which I thought was okay but not great. The interesting premise and beautiful cover were what caught my attention with Gray’s latest book. I am so glad I read this book, it was absolutely astonishingly good. It looks like there are three books planned in this series, books 2 and 3 are untitled with undetermined release dates.Marguerite Caine’s parents are amazing physicists who have developed something truly astounding, a device called the Firebird. The Firebird will let a wearer jump between parallel realities, not physically but consciously. When Marguerite’s father is murdered the number one suspect is one of his research assistants named Paul. With the assistance of another research assistant, named Theo, Marguerite and Theo use some prototype Firebird devices to chase after Paul. Their hunt for Paul will take them through many parallel realities both similar to the world they know and completely alien.Okay so I just finished this book and I am honestly still a little speechless/breathless. This was an absolutely remarkable book. To be honest I wasn't a huge fan of Gray's Evernight series, it was okay, but nothing special. This first book in the Firebird series however is completely different from anything Gray has written before and it is completely awesome.Grey presents the reader with a very complex idea and world, but she does a wonderful job of making something complex easy to grasp. The whole story focuses on parallel realities and characters that use a device called the Firebird to travel between them. Of course there is a lot more to the story than that. The characters don’t travel physically but their conscious travels into the person they would have been in that parallel realm.The characters and plot are engaging and all the worlds they travel through are incredibly well done. You never know what reality the characters will end up in next. Some of the parallel realities are very similar to our own and some are vastly different.Marguerite adds an interesting dynamic to the story. She is an incredibly talented artist raised in a primarily scientific minded family, yet this doesn’t bother her all that much. She is able to use her particular set of skills to help in her own way. Watching as she discovers how her artistic talents have surfaced in each reality she travels through is fascinating.Marguerite, Theo, and Paul have a bit of a love triangle thing going on, but this isn’t really what drives the story. It is more that they have worked so closely and are such good friends. Theo and Marguerite feel a drive to hunt down Paul both to bring him to justice and to understand what drove him to do what he did.There are so many interesting side theories on destiny and fate and the mathematical probability of the same people being interconnected in different realities. I loved that some of these deeper questions are brought into this science fiction driven story. There are a number of crazy plot twists that I definitely didn’t see coming. Seriously this book blew my mind, while being incredibly entertaining and evoking a lot of emotion. I laughed, I cried, I held onto my Kindle (I got this as an eGalley) white knuckled. I loved this book and couldn't put it down. It ends at a great spot too (no awful cliffhanger). I am so excited to see what the next book holds for us.Overall an absolutely stunning read, completely different from anything I have ever read from Gray before. I highly recommend this book to everyone; this is a book that will thrill and enthrall a much broader audience than her previous books. The world, the characters, the plot...all of it was just so engaging and so well done. This book is not just a thrilling read but also has a lot of meat to it, there is discussion of fate and destiny and the probability of people meeting across parallel dimensions. This was just such an interesting book and was impossible to put down. I absolutely cannot wait to read the next book in this series!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: One of the best science fiction books I have ever read. From the moment I picked up A Thousand Pieces of You I was captivated and I loved every minute of it!Opening Sentence: My hands shake as I brace myself against the brick wall.The Review:Marguerite Caine is a seventeen year old girl that has crazy smart parents. Both of them are physicists and for years they have been working on inventing a device, known as the Firebird, that will allow you to travel between all the different parallel worlds. Just recently they had a breakthrough and the Firebird is finally ready to test. But before they have the opportunity to try it Marguerite’s father is murdered by her parents long time assistant, Paul. Paul steals the Firebird and jumps into another dimension in order to escape.Marguerite won’t allow her father’s murderer to go unpunished so she decides to follow Paul through the different worlds in order to bring justice to her family. Luckily she doesn’t have to go alone, Theo her parents other assistant, goes with her to the different universes. Each world is different, some more than others, but it seems that there are certain things that remain the same no matter what dimension Marguerite ends up in. Each time she runs into Paul she begins to doubt his guilt, and soon she doesn’t know what to believe or how she should feel. As things start to unravel she realizes that nothing was what it seemed.Marguerite was a wonderful protagonist with a fun personality. I think the main thing I loved about her was the fact that she was so different from everyone else in her life. While all her family and friends were scientists she was an artist. She looked at life so differently from everyone else and that really made her stand out. But that also made her feel out of place a lot of times in her life. She never felt as smart or important as everyone else, which is something a lot of teenagers go through in life. She grows so much as a character and even though she doesn’t always make the best decisions she always tries to make them for the right reasons. I thought that she was very easy to connect with and I can’t wait to read more of her story!I am not going to go into detail about the boys because I don’t want to spoil anything but I will say a couple things about each of them. First you are introduced to Theo, a charismatic, flirtatious young man that everyone loves. He is the type of person that will go far because he knows how to charm people and he works hard. Next up you have Paul, a very reserved, shy guy that always speaks what’s on his mind whether it is offensive or not. He isn’t easy to get to know and even though he is awkward socially he actually has a very big heart. I loved each boy so much but only one stole my heart!A Thousand Pieces of You was a wonderfully written story that captivated me from the very first page. Lately I feel like there have been multiple young adult books released that feature parallel worlds, but Grey had her own unique spin to the concept. She focused on the scientific aspect of the idea and it actually made it seem much more believable then other books I have read that featured parallel worlds. It also made it a lot less confusing then other books I have read which I really appreciated. Because they travel to multiple worlds there are many different settings which I loved because you got to discover all the different versions of what the world could be like depending on the choices you make. With the suspense, action adventure, and sexy romance this book was almost impossible to put down. I also have to say that this is by far my favorite cover of 2014 and it fits the book perfectly. Pretty much everything about this story was done perfectly and I can’t wait to read the next book in the series. I would highly recommend this to anyone that is a young adult sci-fi or romance fan, you will not be disappointed.Notable Scene:I meant it when I said I didn’t believe in love at first sight. It takes time to really, truly fall for someone. Yet I believe in a moment. A moment when you glimpse the truth within someone, and they glimpse the truth within you. In that moment, you don’t belong to yourself any longer, not completely. Part of you belongs to him; part of him belongs to you. After that, you can’t take it back, no matter how much you want to, no matter how hard you try.FTC Advisory: HarperTeen provided me with a copy of A Thousand Pieces of You. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have wanted to read Firebird Trilogy for awhile and so glad I finally got around to starting it. I love the multiple narrators for the audiobook, it makes it a more immersive experience. I was hooked by the synopsis because I love a good suspenseful romance, but these could easily be cover buys! Hello, Gorgeous. You know a book is good when you finish it and need to immediately pick up the next one because you have to know what happens next. Marguerite, Paul and Theo are on the adventure of lifetimes and it's just getting started.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The book cover sold me this. Plotwise, there are a lot of cliche tropes and the characters are typical of a YA genre, though that's not really a bad thing. The dimensions were described so visually that I can imagine being transported there myself. A multiverse can be really appealing right about now.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    It had a good plot but it is badly written.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    At times a little difficult to follow, but wow a precious and heart wrenching read. I felt for Meg the entire way through and even though I didn't always agree with her, she was consistent and strong.

    A crazy story btw, I loved the science of it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book. I didn't find it confusing, I found it suspenseful and romantic! I can't wait to read the rest of the series!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    i liked this book, although it was not well written. and the love triangle? really??
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book allows the reader to travel to a few new worlds in the space of a few hours. Such a welcome adventure to be able to travel through space, while stuck at home in quarantine, to hunt down the truth behind a disappearance
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In this story, well crafted with the art of Sci-fi and History, I felt that our protagonist could have exhibited more gumption and nerve early on in the book. It would make those moments when she did exhibit her "ballsy" attitude later in the story a little more believable. I did enjoy the wrap up and can see the reason for the sequels. Though a little slow at times, I felt that her second travel lasted far too long , or maybe we were given more detail on that episode than others. Overall, entertaining

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    It kills me to give this book such a low rating. This would easily be a four or five-star book except... for the romance.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I find the notion of a parallel universe and alternate dimensions fascinating, so when I read the synopsis of this book I immediately bought it and its sequel. Marguerite's parents invented a device that would make traveling to alternate dimensions possible - the Firebird. As a result, her father was murdered and Paul, one of her parents trusted students, is the suspect who escaped to another dimension using the Firebird. Marguerite, with the help of another of her parents students - Theo, goes on a perilous journey full of twists and turns to capture Paul and reclaim the Firebird, But in this story, not everything is at it seems. Although I liked the story, I'm still on the fence when it comes to Marguerite's character. I mean she's smart and all, but it irritates me how 'special" she thinks she is and how quickly she changes her mind when it comes to matters of the heart. I'm also getting a bit tired of love triangles. Good thing the guy Marguerite doesn't choose accepts his defeat with dignity and doesn't vow revenge - as other love triangles go, because that would be another cliché.

    1 person found this helpful

Book preview

A Thousand Pieces of You - Claudia Gray

1

MY HAND SHAKES AS I BRACE MYSELF AGAINST THE BRICK wall. Rain falls cold and sharp against my skin, from a sky I’ve never seen before. It’s hard to catch my breath, to get any sense of where I am. All I know is that the Firebird worked. It hangs around my neck, still glowing with the heat of the journey.

There’s no time. I don’t know whether I have minutes, or seconds, or even less. Desperately I tug at these unfamiliar clothes—the short dress and shiny jacket I wear have no pockets, but there’s a small bag dangling from my shoulder. When I fish inside, I can’t find a pen, but there’s a lipstick. Fingers trembling, I unscrew it and scrawl on a tattered poster on the wall of the alley. This is the message I must pass on, the one goal I have to remember after everything else I am is gone.

KILL PAUL MARKOV.

Then I can only wait to die.

Die isn’t the right word. This body will continue to breathe. The heart will continue to beat. But I won’t be the Marguerite Caine living in it anymore.

Instead, this body will return to its rightful owner, the Marguerite who actually belongs in this dimension. The dimension I leaped into, using the Firebird. Her memories will take over again, any second, any moment, and while I know I’ll awaken again in time, it’s terrifying to think about . . . passing out. Getting lost. Being trapped inside her. Whatever it is that happens to people traveling from another dimension.

It hits me then. The Firebird really works. Travel between alternate dimensions is possible. I just proved it. Within my grief and fear, one small ember of pride glows, and it feels like the only heat or hope in the world. Mom’s theories are true. My parents’ work is vindicated. If only Dad could have known.

Theo. He’s not here. It was unrealistic of me to hope he would be, but I hoped anyway.

Please let Theo be all right, I think. It would be a prayer if I still believed in anything, but my faith in God died last night too.

I lean against the brick wall, hands spread like a suspect’s on a police car right before the cuffs go on. My heart hammers in my chest. Nobody has ever done this before—which means nobody knows what’s about to happen to me. What if the Firebird can’t bring me back to my own dimension?

What if this is how I die?

This time yesterday, my dad probably asked himself that same question.

I close my eyes tightly, and the cold rain on my face mingles with hot tears. Although I try not to picture how Dad died, the images force their way into my mind over and over: his car filling with water; brownish river lapping over the windshield; Dad probably dazed from the wreck but scrambling to get the door open, and failing. Gasping for the last inches of air in the car, thinking of me and Mom and Josie—

He must have been so scared.

Dizziness tilts the ground beneath my feet, weakens my limbs. This is it. I’m going under.

So I force my eyes open to stare at the message again. That’s the first thing I want the other Marguerite to see. I want that message to stay with her, no matter what. If she sees that, if she keeps running over those words in her mind, that will awaken me within her as surely as the Firebird could. My hate is stronger than the dimensions, stronger than memory, stronger than time. My hate is now the truest part of who I am.

The dizziness builds, and the world turns fuzzy and gray, blackening the words KILL PAUL MARKOV

—and then my vision clears. The word KILL sharpens back into focus.

Confused, I step back from the brick wall. I feel wide awake. More so than before, actually.

And as I stand there, staring down at my high heels in a puddle, I realize that I’m not going anywhere.

Finally, as I begin to trust my luck, I step farther into the alley. The rain beats down harder on my face as I look up into the storm-drenched sky. A hovercraft looms low over the city like yet another thundercloud. Apparently it’s there to fly holographic billboards across the city skyline. Astonished, I gaze at the hovercraft as it soars through this strange new dimension, 3D advertisements flickering through their motions in the sky around it: Nokia. BMW. Coca-Cola.

This is so like my world, and yet not my world at all.

Is Theo as overwhelmed by the journey as I am? He must be. His grief is nearly as deep as mine, even though Dad was only his adviser; more than that, this is what Theo and my parents worked for these past few years. Has he kept his memory as well? If so, we’ll be in control throughout the trip, our minds piloting the selves born in this alternate dimension. That means Mom was wrong about one thing—which is kind of staggering, given that every other theory she’s ever had has just been proved true. But I’m grateful for it, at least for the moment before my gratitude disintegrates in the hot blaze of anger.

Nothing can stop me now. If Theo made it too and he can find me—and I want so desperately for him to find me—then we’ll be able to do this. We can get to Paul. We can take back the Firebird prototype he stole. And we can take our revenge for what he did to my father.

I don’t know if I’m the kind of person who can kill a man in cold blood. But I’m going to find out.

2

I’M NOT A PHYSICIST LIKE MOM. NOT EVEN A GRAD STUDENT in physics like Paul and Theo. I’m the homeschooled daughter of two scientists who gave me a lot of leeway to direct my own education. As the only right-brained member of the family, I wound up pursuing my passion for painting a whole lot more than I ever studied higher-level science. In the fall, I’m headed to the Rhode Island School of Design, where I’m going to major in art restoration. So if you want to mix oil paints, stretch a canvas, or discuss Kandinsky, I’m your girl. The science underlying cross-dimensional travel? No such luck. But here’s what I know:

The universe is in fact a multiverse. Countless quantum realities exist, all layered within one another; we’ll call these dimensions, for short.

Each dimension represents one set of possibilities. Essentially, everything that can happen does happen. There’s a dimension where the Nazis won World War II. A dimension where the Chinese colonized America long before Columbus ever sailed over. And a dimension where Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston are still married. Even a dimension just like my own, identical in every way, except on one day in fourth grade, that Marguerite chose to wear a blue shirt while I chose to wear a green one. Every possibility, every time fate flips a coin, splits the dimensions yet again, creating yet more layers of reality. It goes on and on forever, to infinity.

These dimensions aren’t off in faraway outer space. They’re literally all around us, even within us, but because they exist in another reality, we can’t perceive them.

Early in her career, my mom, Dr. Sophia Kovalenka, hypothesized that we should be able not only to detect those dimensions but also to observe them—even interact with them. Everyone laughed. She wrote paper after paper, expanded her theory year after year, and nobody would listen.

Then one day, just when it looked like she was going to get permanently written off as a crackpot, she managed to publish one more paper pointing out parallels between wave theory and her work on dimensional resonance. Possibly only one scientist on earth took that paper seriously—Dr. Henry Caine, an English oceanographer. And physicist. And mathematician. And, obviously, overachiever. When he saw the paper, he was able to grasp potential that nobody else had ever seen before in the theory. This was lucky for Mom, because once they became research partners, her work really started to go somewhere.

This was even luckier for Josie and me, because Dr. Henry Caine would become our dad.

Fast-forward twenty-four years. Their work had reached the point where it was starting to attract notice even outside scientific circles. The experiments in which they’d shown evidence of alternate dimensions had been replicated by other scientists at Stanford and Harvard; nobody was laughing at them anymore. They were ready to try traveling between dimensions—or, at least, to fashion a device that could make it possible.

Mom’s theory is that it would be very, very difficult for physical objects to move between dimensions, but energy should be able to move fairly easily. She also says consciousness is a form of energy. This led to all kinds of crazy speculation—but mostly Mom and Dad remained focused on building a device that would turn dimensional travel into more than a dream. Something that would allow people to journey to another dimension at will, and, even trickier, to come back again the same way.

This was daring. Even dangerous. The devices have to be made out of specific materials that move much more easily than other forms of matter; they have to anchor the consciousness of the traveler, which is apparently very difficult; and about a million other technical considerations I’d have to get umpteen physics degrees to even understand. Long story short: the devices are really hard to make. Which is why my parents went through several prototypes before even considering a test.

So when they finally had one that seemed like it would work, only a couple of weeks ago, we had to celebrate. Mom and Dad, who usually drink nothing stronger than Darjeeling, opened a bottle of champagne. Theo handed me a glass too, and nobody even cared.

To the Firebird, Theo said. The final prototype lay on the table around which we stood, its workings gleaming, intricate layers of metal folded in and atop each other like an insect’s wings. Named after the legendary Russian creature that sends heroes on amazing quests and adventures—here Theo nodded at my mother, before continuing—and of course after my own muscle car, because yes, it’s just that cool. Theo is a guy who says things like muscle car ironically. He says almost everything ironically. But there was real admiration in his eyes as he looked at my parents that night. Here’s hoping we have some adventures of our own.

To the Firebird, Paul said. He must have been plotting what he was going to do right then, even as he lifted his glass and clinked it against Dad’s.

Basically, after decades of struggle and ridicule, my parents had finally reached the point where they’d gained real respect—and they were on the brink of a breakthrough that would take them far beyond that. Mom would’ve been heralded as one of the leading scientists in all history. Dad would have gotten at least Pierre Curie status. We could maybe even have afforded for me to take a summer art tour in Europe, where I could go to the Hermitage and the Prado and every other amazing gallery I’d heard of but never seen before. Everything we’d ever dreamed of was on the horizon.

Then their trusted research assistant, Paul Markov, stole the prototype, killed my father, and ran.

He could have gotten away with it, slipping into another dimension beyond the reach of the law: the perfect crime. He vanished from his dorm room without a trace, leaving his door locked from the inside.

(Apparently when people travel between dimensions, their physical forms are no longer observable, which is a quantum mechanics thing, and explaining it involves this whole story about a cat that’s in a box and is simultaneously alive and dead until you open the box, and it gets seriously complicated. Never ask a physicist about that cat.)

Nobody could find Paul; nobody could catch him. But Paul didn’t count on Theo.

Theo came to me earlier this evening as I sat on the rickety old deck in our backyard. The only illumination came from the full moon overhead and the lights Josie had strung on the railing last summer, the ones shaped like tropical fish that glowed aquamarine and orange. I had on one of Dad’s old cardigans over my ivory lace dress. Even in California, December nights can be cold, and besides—the sweater still smelled like Dad.

I think Theo had watched me for a while before he came out there, waiting for me to pull myself together. My cheeks were flushed and tear streaked. I’d blown my nose so many times that it felt raw every time I inhaled. My head throbbed. But for the moment, I’d cried myself out.

Theo sat on the steps beside me, jittery, on edge, one foot bouncing up and down. Listen, he said. I’m about to do something stupid.

What?

His dark eyes met mine, so intent that I thought, for one crazy moment, despite everything that was going on, he was about to kiss me.

Instead, he held out his hand. In it were the two other versions of the Firebird. I’m going after Paul.

You— My wavering voice, already strained from crying, broke. I had so many questions that I couldn’t even begin at first. You still have the old prototypes? I thought you broke them down afterward.

That’s what Paul thought too. And—well, technically, always what your parents thought. He hesitated. Even mentioning Dad, only a day after his death, hurt so terribly—for Theo nearly as much as for me. But I kept the parts we didn’t reuse. Tinkered with them, borrowed some equipment from the Triad labs. Used the advances we made on the last Firebird to improve these two. There’s a decent shot one of these will work.

A decent shot. Theo was about to take an incredible risk because it gave him a decent shot at avenging what Paul had done.

As funny as he’d always been, as flirty as we occasionally got, I’d sometimes wondered whether Theo Beck was full of crap underneath his indie band T-shirts and his hipster hat and the 1981 Pontiac he’d fixed up himself. Now I was ashamed to have ever doubted him.

When people travel through dimensions, he said, staring down at the prototypes, they leave traces. Subatomic—okay, I’m gonna cut to the chase. The point is, I can go after Paul. No matter how often he jumps, how many dimensions he tries to move through, he’ll always leave a trace. And I know how to set these to follow that trace. Paul can run, but he can’t hide.

The Firebirds glinted in his palm. They looked like odd, asymmetrical bronze lockets—maybe jewelry fashioned in the era of Art Nouveau, when organic shapes were all the rage. One of the metals inside was rare enough that it could only be mined in a single valley in the whole world, but anyone who didn’t know better would just think they were pretty. Instead the Firebirds were the keys to unlock the universe. No—the universes.

Can you follow him anywhere?

Almost anywhere, Theo answered, and he gave me a look. "You know the limits, right? You didn’t tune out every time we talked about this around the dinner table?"

I know the limits, I said, stung. I meant, within those.

Then yeah.

Living beings can only travel to dimensions where they already exist. A dimension where my parents never met? That’s a dimension I can never see. A dimension where I’m already dead? Can’t get there from here. Because when a person travels to another dimension, they actually materialize within their other self. Wherever that other version of you might be, whatever they’re doing: that’s where you are.

What if Paul jumps somewhere you can’t follow? I asked.

Theo shrugged. I’ll end up in the next universe over, I guess. But it’s no big. When he jumps again, I’ll have a chance to pick up his trace from there. His gaze was far away as he turned the Firebirds over in his palm.

To me it sounded like Paul’s best bet would be to keep jumping, as fast as he could, until he found a universe where none of the rest of us existed. Then he could remain there as long as he liked, without ever getting caught.

But the thing was, Paul wanted something besides destroying my parents. No matter what a creep he’d turned out to be, he wasn’t stupid. So I knew he wouldn’t do this out of sheer cruelty. If he’d just wanted money, he would have sold the device to somebody in his own dimension, not fled into another one.

Whatever he wanted, he couldn’t hide forever. Sooner or later, Paul would have to go after his true, secret goal. When he did, that was when we could catch him.

We could catch him. Not Theo alone—both of us. Theo held two prototypes in his hand.

The cool breeze ruffled my hair and made the lights flutter back and forth on the deck railing, like the plastic fish were trying to swim away. I said, What happens if the Firebird doesn’t actually work?

He scraped his Doc Martens against the old wood of the deck; a bit of it splintered away. Well, it might not do anything. I might just stand there feeling stupid.

That’s the worst-case scenario?

No, the worst-case scenario involves me getting blended into so much atomic soup.

Theo—

Won’t happen, he said, cocky as ever. At least, I strongly doubt it.

My voice was hardly more than a whisper. But you’d take that risk. For Dad’s sake.

Our eyes met as Theo said, For all of you.

I could hardly breathe.

But he glanced away after only a second, adding, Like I said, it won’t happen. Probably either of these would work. I mean, I rebuilt them, and as we both know, I’m brilliant.

When you guys were talking about testing one of these, you said there was no way in hell any of you should even consider it.

Yeah, well, I exaggerate a lot. You must have realized that by now. Theo may be full of it, but I give him this: at least he knows he’s full of it. And besides, that was before I got to work on them. The Firebirds are better now than ever before.

It wasn’t like I made a decision at any one moment. When Theo came to sit with me on the deck, I felt powerless against the tragedy that had ripped my family in two; by the time I spoke, I’d known exactly what I intended to do for what seemed like a long time. If you’re that sure, then okay. I’m in.

Whoa. Hang on. I never said this was a trip for two.

I pointed at the Firebird lockets. Count ’em.

His fist closed around the Firebirds, and he stared down at his hand like he wished he hadn’t brought them both and given me the idea—but too bad, and too late.

Quietly I said, You’re not to blame. But you’re also not talking me out of it.

Theo leaned closer to me, and the smirk was gone. Marguerite, have you thought about the risks you’d be taking?

"They’re no worse than the risks you’d take. My dad is dead. Mom deserves some justice. So Paul has to be stopped. I can help you stop him."

It’s dangerous. I’m not even talking about the dimension-jumping stuff right now. I mean—we don’t know what kind of worlds we’ll find ourselves in. All we know is that, wherever we end up, Paul Markov is there, and he’s a volatile son of a bitch.

Paul, volatile. Two days earlier, I would have laughed at that. To me Paul had always seemed as quiet and stolid as the rock cliffs he climbed on weekends.

Now I knew that Paul was a murderer. If he’d do that to my father, he’d do it to Theo or me. None of that mattered anymore.

I said, I have to do this, Theo. It’s important.

It is important. That’s why I’m doing it. Doesn’t mean you have to.

Think about it. You can’t jump into any dimensions where you don’t exist. There are probably some dimensions I exist in that you don’t.

And vice versa, he retorted.

Still. I took Theo’s free hand then, like I could make him understand how serious I was just by squeezing tightly. I can follow him to places where you can’t. I extend your reach. I make the chances of finding him a lot better. Don’t argue with me, because you know it’s true.

Theo breathed out, squeezed my hand back, let it go, and ran his fingers through his spiky hair. He was restless and jumpy as always—but I could tell he was considering it.

When his dark eyes next met mine, he sighed. If your mother had any idea we were talking about this, she’d skin me alive. I’m not being metaphorical about that. I think she could actually, literally skin me. She gets the wild eyes sometimes. There’s Cossack blood in her; I’d bet anything.

I hesitated for a moment, thinking of what this meant for my mother. If something went wrong on this trip—if I turned into atomic soup—she would have lost both me and Dad within the space of two days. There weren’t even words for what that would do to her.

But if Paul got away with it, that would kill her just as surely—and me, too. I wasn’t going to let that happen. You’re already talking about Mom’s revenge. That means we’re doing this together, doesn’t it?

Only if you’re absolutely sure. Please think about this for a second first.

I’ve thought about it, I said, which wasn’t exactly true, but it didn’t matter. I meant it then as much as I mean it now. I’m in.

That’s how I got here.

But where is here, exactly? As I walk along the street, crowded despite the late hour, I try to study my surroundings. Wherever I am, it’s not California.

Picasso could have painted this city with its harsh angles, its rigidity, and the way dark lines of steel seem to slash through buildings like knife strokes. I imagine myself as one of the women he painted—face divided in two, asymmetrical and contradictory, one half appearing to smile while the other is silently screaming.

I stop in my tracks. By now I’ve found my way to the river-side, and across the dark water, illuminated by spotlights, is a building I recognize: St. Paul’s Cathedral.

London. I’m in London.

Okay. All right. That makes sense. Dad is . . . he was English. He didn’t move to the United States until he and Mom started working together. In this dimension, I guess she came to his university instead, and we all live here in London.

The thought of my father alive again, somewhere nearby, bubbles up inside me until I can hardly think of anything else. I want to run to him right now, right this second, and hug him tight and apologize for every time I ever talked back to him or made fun of his dorky bow ties.

But this version of my dad won’t be my dad. He’ll be another version. This Marguerite’s father.

I don’t care. This is as close as I’m ever going to get to Dad again, and I’m not wasting it.

Okay. Next step: discover where this version of home is.

The three trips I’ve taken to London to visit Aunt Susannah were all fairly quick; Aunt Susannah’s all about shopping and gossip, and as much as Dad loved his sister, he could take about six days with her, maximum, before he lost it. But I was there long enough to know that London shouldn’t look anything like this.

Even as I walk along the street by the South Bank of the Thames, I can tell computers were invented a little earlier here, because they’ve advanced further. Several people, despite the drizzling rain, have paused to bring up little glowing squares of light—like computer screens, except they’ve appeared in thin air in front of their users. One woman is talking to a face; that must be a holographic phone call. As I stand there, one of my wide bangle bracelets is shimmering with light. I lift my wrist closer to my face and read the words, written on the inside in small metallic type:

ConTech Personal Security

DEFENDER Model 2.8

Powered by Verizon

I’m not quite sure what that means, but I don’t think this bracelet is just a bracelet.

What other kinds of advanced technology do they have here? To everybody else in this dimension, all this stuff is beyond routine. Both the hoverships above London and the no-rail monorail snaking along overhead are filled with bored passengers, for whom this is just the end of another dull day.

There’s no place like home, I think, but the feeble joke falls flat even inside my own head. I look down again at the high heels I wear, so unlike my usual ballet flats. Ruby slippers they’re not.

Then I remind myself that I’ve got the most powerful technology of all—the Firebird—hanging around my neck. I open the locket and look at the device inside.

It’s complicated. Very complicated. The thing reminds me of our universal remote, which has so many keys and buttons and functions that nobody in my household—which contains multiple physicists, including my mother who is supposed to be the next Einstein—none of us can figure out how to switch from the Playstation to the DVR. But just like with the universal remote, I’ve learned a few functions, the ones that matter most: How to jump into a new dimension. How to jump back from one if I land somewhere immediately dangerous. How to spark

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1