[ Note:
I wish this website allowed you to pick the artwork from the edition you read and remember.
I must have had the first edition print, with the pastel coloured artwork of the shed with the sundial outside of it..
Very '80s ! ]
I went to a good school, reading was encouraged. I have NO IDEA why, but our teacher decided to pick this book and we all read chapters of it in class. I don't think we ever finished it, so I got it out the school library and finished it myself.
Another one of those books that holds weird nostalgic memories because of the time and place that I read it..
What can I say.. this book fucked me up!
It's more of a horror story than a fun childrens adventure.
This is all from memory nearly 30 years ago, but I still remember it.
Two identical twin brothers that don't get along very well find that FOR SOME REASON the shed in their garden contains a singularity where time runs at an exponentially faster rate within. One of the twins gets it in their head (or they both do) that if one of them was older, then they'd get more respect (?) So, he plans to spend a couple years in the shed. But obviously, being twins, I think they both have a similar idea.
But one of them starts stockpiling rations in the shed, but because time runs faster, everything goes moldy. So, most of it is canned good and long-life crackers and stuff.
I remember the beginning of the meat of the book, where the clock strikes midnight, expecting the other to be asleep, one twin makes dash in the middle of the night to the shed. Once there, after a couple weeks, he sees his brothers bedroom light turn on. Another week goes by, he can see him moving past the window - and after a month, he can see him coming down the stairs.. basically, he's sprinting to the shed, but it will take him a year to get there because time is moving slower.
I remember him doing exercise, eating mold biscuits, rationing his food and water - he has a year or so to spend in the shed while watching his brother slowly advance towards him.
I'm sure I've mixed up most of the story.. but I remember it being a lonely, isolating, sad, horror tale of lies, deceit, misery, going slowly mad.. and some freaky physics that I'm not sure either ever gets explained or resolved. I think the shed may even stop working in the end.. but one brother is left older, and I don't think anybody winds up happy with what transpires.
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That review was entirely from a 20+ year old memory.
Now, having read the decription afterwards and seen the cover.. I don't remember any metal teeth sharks or 'portal to terror'.. Just that time ran weird so the plot I described above took place.
Um.. I may have to re-read this.
These days time travel, space travel, black holes.. super heroes.. you name it - its on TV and in movies. But this is one of those early sci-fi what-if books that I think was quite original for its time. Obviously the originators of all thins sci-fi by the likes of HG Wells, Philip K Dick, William Gibson etc.. are the masters. But this is a quirky, dark tale that doesn't have much like it at the time of print. And so for that, I rate it a midrange read, but deduct a point yourself for having no nostagic factor for you. Because of the memories of school, my teacher (possibly dead now?) and the classroom and library I learned the fundamentals and enjoyment of reading and learning in, it gets a bonus star for my own personal rating.
Also, learning at 11 years old about singularities causing time to run at different rates and that being true, around black holes.. well, actually wherever there is gravity, was quite mindbending and sparked an interest in physics I still have to this day.
My 20 year long subscription to New Scientist is testament to that. I started it in Secondary school and still have it delivered once a week to wherever I'm living. And I sure have moved around!
Bottom line..
Weird book. Bleak and lonely. Physics gone awry!