Ultraviolet
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4.8 • 22 Ratings
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- £2.99
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
Once upon a time there was a girl who was special.
This is not her story.
Unless you count the part where I killed her.
Sixteen-year-old Alison has been sectioned in a mental institute for teens, having murdered the most perfect and popular girl at school. But the case is a mystery: no body has been found, and Alison's condition is proving difficult to diagnose. Alison herself can't explain what happened: one minute she was fighting with Tori - the next she disintegrated. Into nothing. But that's impossible. Right?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a change of pace from her Faery Hunters series, Anderson blends paranormal, science fiction, and scientific elements in an intriguing story about a teenager who is convinced that she's crazy and a murderer though reality is even more unpredictable. Sixteen-year-old Alison Jeffries awakens in the psych ward of a hospital, and is soon transferred to a treatment center for "youth in crisis." The police, meanwhile, believe Alison knows something about the disappearance of her classmate, Tori. She does. Alison had watched Tori disintegrate before her eyes, and she believes that her barely understood "powers" are to blame. With the help of Sebastian Faraday, a mysterious neuropsychologist, Alison starts to get answers: she is a synesthete her senses of smell, taste, sight, and hearing intertwined in surprising ways as well as a tetrachromat, able to perceive ultraviolet light. Alison's conditions allow the author to give her some enviable abilities and use some creative descriptions (Faraday's voice tastes, to Alison, like "ark chocolate, poured over velvet). Anderson keeps readers guessing throughout with several twists, including a very unexpected divergence in the last third of the book. Ages 12 up.
Customer Reviews
Best Book In The World!!!
I love this book I would recommend it to ppl that love teenage fiction with a weird unique twist :)
Brilliant.
I love this book. The story is imaginative and captivating, with lots of twists to keep it interesting. Best part = description. Things are written in a creative way that I have never heard of before and it is incredibly effective.
Best book I've read in a long time.
Totally Unexpected
Brilliant plot, very original. It developed unpredictably, which was great. 4 stars not 5 because it is a bit on the random side, but for a sci-fi book (which as a general rule I don't like very much) it's very, very good.