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The Quantum July [Hardcover]

Ron King (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

10 and up5 and up
DANNY PARSONS IS a dreamer. He loves nothing better than to close his eyes and let the world slip away, dreaming of India, or Alaska, or Kenya - anywhere but his home, living any life but his life. Danny is sure that he was supposed to be someone else, living in a more interesting place, with a more interesting family.

Danny's sister, Bridget, believes that Danny's life is more interesting than he knows: she thinks he can set events in motion by touching equations. When she gives him an equation dealing with Chaos Theory to carry in his pocket, an amazing thing happens: Danny's family separates into two. We can't choose our families. But Danny Parsons can. Trapped in the chaos of the quantum world, he's approaching the moment where he will have to, at last, choose - between the father he's always wanted, and the family he desperately needs.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Ron King, an English teacher, lives in Newcastle, New Hampshire. The Quantum July is his first novel.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

If Danny Parsons had known he was about to "unleash the power of the quantum world"--which was how his little sister, Bridget, referred to it--or if he'd had even the slightest clue that in two hours the shed he was leaning against was going to explode in a fireball of near-Big Bang proportions, he probably would have had an easier time staying awake. As it was, he sat in the shade, let his eyes slowly close, and tried to keep from drooling on himself.Part of the problem was that it was July and hot. And the other part of the problem was that, on the other side of the wall he was leaning against, his mother was scribbling physics equations on a chalkboard. That reminded him of Mrs. Ferguson's seventh-grade math class. And that made him droopy. His eyes drooped until they were shut, and his chin sagged and hung from his mouth, just about resting on his chest.Math had always had that effect on him. It was in Mrs. Ferguson's math class that he'd broken his personal record for most consecutive days of falling asleep in school. Seventy-two. That added up to almost half a year. It might even have been a record for the entire seventh grade. His brother, Simon, who had just turned sixteen, liked to brag that when he was in seventh grade, he fell asleep seventy-seven times, but that was in Mrs. Ruskin's English class, where she was always playing Beethoven and Bach in the background, which was completely unfair. Plus, it was right after lunch, which was also completely unfair. Who wouldn't fall asleep? No, in Danny's mind, seventy-two third-period math naps with Mrs. Ferguson was a far bigger accomplishment. Especially considering that during the entire class she would constantly lean over Danny's shoulder and shout, "Wrong, wrong, wrong," in his ear. He would have liked to see Simon fall asleep under those conditions."Danny, wake up!""The answer is seventy-two," Danny said, his eyes startled and wide. He sat up and searched for the blackboard, the math problems, and tried to shield himself from the scorn of Mrs. Ferguson. But she wasn't there. Instead he saw the yard, his house, the barn just off to his left. He breathed a bit more easily and leaned his head against the shed. He could hear his mother on the other side of the wall. It was summer. He wasn't in school after all.Bridget, his twelve-year-old sister, glared at him. "Will you quiet down? Do you want her to hear us?""Well, stop scaring me," he said. He wiped the sweat from his forehead and shook out an arm that had started to fall asleep. "Anything happening yet?""Not yet," Bridget said.His eyes drooped again.Danny didn't mean to abandon his sister in the middle of their spying activities, but dreaming, dropping off for a moment no matter where he was, was one of the best things in his life. He dreamed--sometimes fully asleep, and sometimes by slipping into that strange place that lies between sleep and wakefulness--all the time, one minute aware of the world around him and then, in a second, drifting into a dream about a different life in another time, a dream about the life he might have lived if he hadn't been kidnapped.The dreams weren't about being kidnapped. They were dreams about a world that had somehow gone wrong--put him in the wrong family, the wrong place. They were dreams that tried to help Danny make sense of his life, because as far as he was concerned, one thing was certain: he wasn't supposed to be Danny Parsons at all. In his heart, in his very soul, he was supposed to be somebody else, somebody important. And his dreams helped him discover who that might be.He'd been creating these dreams and making up stories about himself for years, but for the past year, thanks to subscriptions to National Geographic and Smithsonian magazines, his stories had been getting much better. He used photos from the magazines to make the sights--and even the sounds and smells--so real and lifelike that he'd suddenly find that he'd been lost in a dream for hours at a time. He dreamed in bed, at the dinner table, and most often at school. That was his primary activity for about half of his time in seventh grade, though Mrs. Ferguson and his other teachers hadn't seemed to notice.But his classmates had. Danny's reputation as a perpetual dreamer was well established. He was the kid who was always "out to lunch," "zoned out." "Danny Parsons," kids said, "lights on but nobody's home." There wasn't a kid at school who didn't know him as the space cadet.Including Sarah Evans.But a part of him almost didn't care, because the fact was that the stories were so much better than his actual life, so much more exciting and real.In his imagined life he could become the second son of an Arab sultan. He could walk down a Cairo street and smell the camels, feel the dust and heat and noise of Egyptian life. Or he could be the second son of a Scandinavian reindeer breeder and, just as Mrs. Ferguson was explaining how to solve for x, he'd find himself wincing at the cold, squinting in the blinding light of the Arctic sun. He'd gotten pretty good at it. The dream stories were perfect.And there were moments when, in his own mind, he ceased being Danny Parsons, the second son of Wade Parsons, the Harvard-educated stock boy. He became, instead, the second son of a great and powerful man, standing before the wonders of the world in a seersucker suit, the smells of exotic spices and ancient dust surrounding him until he felt himself standing taller, breathing easier, with confidence, so that he felt that if he held his hand out to a dark-haired, blue-eyed girl, she'd be glad to take it.This time, as he sat outside the shed in his backyard, his chin sank slowly to his chest and he began to dream that he was the second son of an international undercover agent who had brought him to a laboratory on the outskirts of Prague to spy on a top-secret nuclear physicist.The Czechoslovakian sun is hotter than usual and, in spite of the tension surrounding the spying and the intrigue and the cool way his father's German-made pistol makes his pocket bulge, Danny finds himself repeatedly distracted by a group of young people his age who take the benches beside them. One of the girls has dark hair and blue eyes and she reminds him of someone, if he could only think who it is, but his father places his hand firmly in the middle of Danny's back and leads him silently into the shade, where they wait for the moment when the secrets of the universe will be revealed to them. Just Danny and his father. Together. And in the dream Danny knows that this is what he has been waiting for his entire life, although, for some reason, every now and again he steals a look over his shoulder at the girl on the bench behind him.Bridget grabbed his arm. "Shhh!" she said, even though he hadn't said a word. "Listen."Danny blinked in the light that reflected off the roof of the barn and rubbed his arm, which had fallen asleep for real this time.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 10 and up
  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers (October 9, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385734182
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385734189
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,407,113 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Read this book!, December 11, 2007
This review is from: The Quantum July (Hardcover)
For anyone who has ever enjoyed a Madeline L'Engle book, this book is for you. Ron King combines a thought provoking plot with snappy dialogue, and people-next-door characters. Added to that is a sprinkling of Quantum physics which is clearly explained and acts as the sauce which keeps the story together. It is a scientific story for non-scientists. Run, don't walk, to the book store!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Until you look, both exist. What did that mean?", November 23, 2007
This review is from: The Quantum July (Hardcover)
Thirteen-year-old Danny Parsons belongs to an eccentric family. His father is an underachiever with some training in Eastern esoterica. His ambitious mother took a degree in particle physics in college and now wants to put it to use. Enigmatic Simon, Danny's older brother, has some dark corners; and his younger sister, Bridget, isn't quite Einstein, but she's close.

Escapist Danny decorates his room's walls with elaborate alternate lives he could live, and he daydreams about exploits he could undertake. At school Danny is known as "the space cadet," and he secretly worries that, like his Harvard-educated, stock boy father, he may drift aimlessly in life.

But, observant Bridget knows Danny is very special; she is convinced he's some kind of human conduit for coalescing change on a cosmic level. She tries to give her brother an explanation for his ability to " 'unleash the power of the quantum world' " or, in his father's words, " 'ride the energy.' " She feeds him facts about quantum theory. She tells him about Schroedinger's cat, a famous thought experiment that illustrates a law of the quantum world called superposition...or, in layman's terms, "Until you look, both exist."

Danny longs to understand this weird concept because he thinks he is experiencing some major superposition of his own: he has seen another version of his father in their barn. Soon after this encounter, Danny experiences more and more superposition. Different realities bring different and drastic consequences to his family, and Danny concludes he must try to reintegrate these shifting alternate existences. Perhaps his strange talent -- which blew up a shed on their property because he touched a blackboard formula -- is the Parsons' only hope when their family splinters and tragedy befalls them.

Author Ron King assumes for the sake of THE QUANTUM JULY that superposition and other aspects of quantum reality can manifest in the macro world, a notion current science bars. But he has a lot of fun posing the idea that it could. And readers young and old can enjoy his audacity in stretching the boundaries.

THE QUANTUM JULY presents an rousingly imaginative and suspenseful story for young people (and adults) interested in science as well as Eastern meditation and visualization practices. It presents quirkily rounded characters with weaknesses and worries common to most of us -- although they can also represent types (e.g., scientific vs. spiritual). This, however, isn't only a sci-fi tale. It also bids readers to think about what binds families and what can tear them apart. And, Danny's questions about who he is and wants to be mirror concerns of real young people, even if their quests and resolutions aren't likely to rival his for extenuating drama.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, October 10, 2007
This review is from: The Quantum July (Hardcover)
Science has always been a mystery to me, especially the study of physics. I vaguely remember learning about quantum theory, chaos theory, and the Uncertainty Principle way back in high school. It was Greek to me then and even after reading THE QUANTUM JULY by Ron King, it is still Greek to me now.

I like Danny Parsons. He is a dreamer. We all have slipped into a daydream every now and again where we dreamed that we were someone else or somewhere else. Danny takes daydreaming to a whole new level. He actually catalogues the lives that he lives in his dreams. He has notebooks organizing them. For example, the blue notebook is titled "Royal Lives" and in that notebook there is story of him being taken from the family of the "dragon king" in Bhutan. In the red notebook, titled "Adventure and Intrigue," stories include him being the son of a KGB agent stationed in Berlin before his capture. There is one notebook he keeps, an orange one, hidden away. All of the other books are past lives but this one is different. This notebook tells of his future lives. The entries in this notebook frighten him because they seem to come true as he puts them down on paper.

You have to love his imagination. Vivid doesn't even begin to describe it. I wish I could dream like Danny does. He is so sure that he was meant to be someone else. If he doesn't dream, he may end up like his father, who stopped dreaming and appears to be lost. That is why their mother left them. Danny's father is not the same man she fell in love with. His mother is a scientist, and it looks like his sister will be following in her footsteps, being the youngest student ever to be accepted into Youth Scholarship Academy. Everything to them can be explained in scientific terms.

Bridget thinks Danny has a gift, a special power of being able to set events in motion, based solely on touch. She came to this conclusion after she and Danny checked the shed their mother uses as lab and it blew up. She is so sure it is all because he touched an equation on the board. Bridget, in true scientist mode, wants to prove her theory, so she gets Danny to carry around an equation in his back pocket. The equation she gave him explains one of the most central proofs of the quantum theory. She thinks that if she is correct in her hypothesis that Danny will notice a difference, like things around him will look different and that sometimes he will feel like there are moments when he isn't where he is supposed to be.

Almost immediately, things start to change, starting with the parents who announce that they are separating -- but that is not all that happens. It seems that his realities are actually splitting and Danny is trapped in the chaos of the quantum world. There comes a time when quantum laws and the laws of the universe makes sense to each other and only at that time can quantum laws change -- but only if you to choose well.

Does Danny have the power to choose well or will this gift simply destroy everything he holds dear? Can something quantum really take place? Can we really use a mathematical equation to explain all the phenomena that happens to us? After all, there are limitations of what can be measured as seen in the Principle of Uncertainty. I don't have an answer, being that I am not a scientist, but I tend to believe in the words of Einstein when he said: "I'd like to believe that the moon is still there even if we don't see it."

Reviewed by: coollibrarianchick
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