Synopsis (from Goodreads)
Pages: 416
Publisher: Harper Collins Children's Books
Released: 10th of January 2019
When eleven-year-old Georgie befriends an eccentric retired scientist, she becomes the test subject for a thrilling new experiment: a virtual-reality 3D version of the future.
But then a deadly disease threatens the life of every dog in the country and Georgie’s beloved dog, Mr Mash, gets sick. And that’s only the start of her troubles.
Soon, Georgie and Mr Mash must embark on a desperate quest: to save every dog on earth, and maybe even all of humanity …
… without actually leaving the room.
An extraordinary quest with the biggest stakes of all, and a huge idea at its heart, this is time travel – but not as you know it.
Trigger Warnings: Illness, animal death, dead parent
What I Have to Say
DO NOT READ THIS BOOK IF YOU ARE A DOG LOVER. From the title, my dog loving heart thought "oh good, a nice heart warming book about a dog saving the world." Never have I been so wrong. I mean, sure I read the blurb and therefore must have seen that there would be a deadly dog disease going around, but I guess I hadn't really connected it to the sort of mad cow disease sort of illness that means mass slaughter of animals. There were some really grim scenes in this book. And though the main character does warn you to look away at certain points, it's probably best not to read it if you get really upset about dogs being killed in books.
Other than that though, it was fairly good. It left me with the same feeling that I'm coming to know well from Ross Welford though: Nothing quite lives up to the beauty that was Time Travelling With a Hamster. It's probably a case of a really amazing first book that other books just can't reach the same heights as, rather than anything lacking, but it leaves me deflated all the same. No matter how great the characters are, how quirky the story is, it's just not Time Travelling With a Hamster.
If you push all that aside though, it really was a great book. Easy to read and with some really fun lighthearted moments. It's so interesting to see Welford's depiction of a near future where disease has changed our lives in so many ways, where UV lights and hand-sanitiser are part of the regular routine to keep these things at bay. The quirky professor with an AR machine was also great fun, though I really think eleven-year-old children should know better by now than to go visit a stranger just because they're invited!
Basically, it's good, but potentially upsetting for dog-lovers. Maybe go read Time Travelling With a Hamster instead.
My thanks go to Netgalley and Harper Collins for providing me with this copy for review.
Oh no that sounds so sad! I can't do books with dog or cat deaths, I find them so much more tramatic than human ones!
ReplyDeleteI got this one for review but hadn't dived into it yet. Thank you for the warning! I'm glad you enjoyed it despite this though. I also still need to read Time Travelling with Hamsters... maybe I'll read this one first... ;)
ReplyDeleteI might give this one a miss, not sure I can cope with this one. 😭
ReplyDelete