T.S. Spivet is a genius mapmaker who lives on a ranch in Montana. His father is a silent cowboy and his mother is a scientist who for the last twenty years has been looking for a mythical species of beetle. His brother has gone, his sister seems normal but might not be, and his dog - Verywell - is going mad. T.S. makes sense of it all by drawing beautiful, meticulous maps kept in innumerable colour-coded notebooks.He is brilliant, and the Smithsonian Institution agrees, though when they award him a major scientific prize they don't suspect for a moment that he is twelve years old.
So begins T.S.'s life-changing adventure, travelling two thousand miles across America to reach the awards dinner, the secret-society membership and the TV interviews that beckon. But is this what he wants? Do maps and lists explain the world? And why are adults so strange?
Publisher: Vintage Publishing
ISBN: 9780099555193
Number of pages: 400
Weight: 684 g
Dimensions: 232 x 197 x 28 mm
Here is a book that does the impossible: it combines Mark Twain, Thomas Pynchon, and Little Miss Sunshine. Good novels entertain; great ones come as a gift to the readers who are lucky enough to find them. This book is a treasure - Stephen King
Larsen has made an impressive mark ... spectacularly funny - Sunday Times
Reif Larsen's wonderful original debut, destined to please readers of all ages, is the Next Big Thing... echoes of Thomas Pynchon, Robert Coover and Nicholson Baker... a lively sophisticated narrative that looks to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Irish Times
A wilfully original and diverting book ... you can see exactly why it caused publishers to sit up. It is charming and kooky - Observer
Think Tom Sawyer with a passion for empirical science... one of the most original books of the year - Metro
This book is wonderfully quirky with a lovable character in T.S. Spivet. One of an oddball family 12 year old T.S. is given an award by the Smithsonian and travels across the US to receive this award. Although this is... More
TS Spivet goes through a journey in this book, like a Rites of Passage novel but the freshness of Spivet's narrative keeps the story turning with ease.
It's possible to forget that there is an adult behind...
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