This propulsive thriller includes well-paced cuts between times that keep the pages turning ... compulsively readable

Kirkus

The diverse cast's crackling chemistry brings humour and heart to the pulse-pounding plot

Publishers Weekly

An engaging and fast-paced thriller

Wall Street Journal

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Young readers will be caught up in the chilling events as seen through the eyes of six friends, but so will adult readers. [...] A page-turner with a cliff-hanger ending ... Highly recommended.

School Library Journal

This propulsive thriller includes well-paced cuts between times that keep the pages turning ... compulsively readable

Kirkus

The diverse cast's crackling chemistry brings humour and heart to the pulse-pounding plot

Publishers Weekly

An engaging and fast-paced thriller

Wall Street Journal

Young readers will be caught up in the chilling events as seen through the eyes of six friends, but so will adult readers. [...] A page-turner with a cliff-hanger ending ... Highly recommended.

School Library Journal

This propulsive thriller includes well-paced cuts between times that keep the pages turning ... compulsively readable

Kirkus

The diverse cast's crackling chemistry brings humour and heart to the pulse-pounding plot

Publishers Weekly

An engaging and fast-paced thriller

Wall Street Journal

Young readers will be caught up in the chilling events as seen through the eyes of six friends, but so will adult readers. [...] A page-turner with a cliff-hanger ending ... Highly recommended.

School Library Journal

We didn’t mean to change the past. Now we have to win the war. A stunning 'what if?' story by a bestselling author about two groups of 12-year-olds – one in World War Two, one in the present day. Henry, Frances and Lukas are neighbours, and they used to be best friends. But in middle school Frances got emo, Lukas went to private school and Henry just felt left behind. When they come together again for the funeral of a pet gerbil, the three ex-friends make a mind-blowing discovery: a radio, buried in Henry’s garden, that allows them to talk to another group of three kids in the same town in New Jersey, USA ... in the same backyard ... eighty years in the past. The kids in 1944 want to know about the future: are there laser guns? Flying cars? Jetpacks, at least? Most of all, they want to know about the outcome of the world war that their dad and brothers are fighting in. Though Henry is cautious – he’s seen movies about what happens when you disrupt the fabric of time – soon the present-day kids are sending their new friends on a mission to rescue a doomed sweet shop. What harm could that do? But one change leads to another, and the six friends accidentally change the course of history in the worst way imaginable: the Nazis winning the war. Now it’s up to the friends to change it back.Co-author Ann Brashares is a New York Times bestseller for The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants, here writing with her fellow children's author and brother Ben for the first time.
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We didn’t mean to change the past. Now we have to win the war. A stunning 'what if?' story by a bestselling author about two groups of 12-year-olds – one in World War Two, one in the present day.
We didn’t mean to change the past. Now we have to win the war. A stunning 'what if?' story by a bestselling author about two groups of 12-year-olds – one in World War Two, one in the present day.
A brilliant concept - Fatherland by Robert Harris or The Man in the High Castle by Philip K Dick for middle-grade readers

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781526685490
Publisert
2025-03-27
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Childrens Books
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
416

Om bidragsyterne

Ann Brashares is a writer and mother of four living in New York City. She is the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series as well as several other novels. She helped her youngest brother, Ben, with his shoes (and the debilitating lumps in his socks) every morning before school until he learned to tie his own shoes … around eighth grade.

Ben Brashares lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with his wife and three children. He’s the author of Being Edie Is Hard Today and The Great Whipplethorp Bug Collection. He holds an MFA in creative writing and has worked at and written for several magazines, including Rolling Stone, Men’s Journal and Entertainment Weekly. As an adult, Ben gets no help whatsoever tying his shoes. But he still has weird pets. And he still gets lumps in his socks.