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Interstellar Pig Mass Market Paperback – June 1, 1995
Purchase options and add-ons
- Reading age10 years and up
- Print length208 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade level5 - 9
- Lexile measure810L
- Dimensions6.9 x 4.3 x 0.6 inches
- PublisherPuffin Books
- Publication dateJune 1, 1995
- ISBN-100140375953
- ISBN-13978-0140375954
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
About the Author
From that point on, I was always writing or composing something. And almost from the very beginning, I was fascinated by the grotesque and macabre. One of my first musical compositions was called "Guillotines in the Springtime." At school, when we were assigned to write a story about a holiday, I always cane up with something like "The Haunted Easter Egg."
In high school I continued writing poems and stories and composing music. When the school orchestra played one of my compositions at an assembly, everybody thought I was a genius. I did nothing to correct this impression. I went to Harvard, where I was miserable -- and wrote intensely tragic novellas, as well as music for student films and plays.. I also kept a voluminous journal, hundreds of single-spaced typed pages.. I gave them different volume titles like Rats Live on No Evil Star. (That's a palindrome.) I told that journal everything, and most of it is drivel. But it was a lot cheaper than going to a psychotherapist, and maybe I'll get some usable material out of it someday.
After college I spent a year in England, where I studied musical composition and worked as a pianist at the Royal Ballet School. It was there that I had the experiences which later became my first YA novel, Blackbriar. I really did live in the middle of a forest in an ancient cottage that once had been a pest house for people with small pocks. Because I was still keeping journal, I put all the details down on paper. Back in the States, I turned the journal into a book, and I was lucky -- because the manuscript was rejected by only one publisher. The second editor who saw it, Ann Durell at Dutton, liked it enough to work with me on it through a couple of drafts, until finally she felt it was good enough for publication and offered me a contract.
My second novel, Run, also took place in a house I had lived in. After that, I ran out of interesting real places to write about. I saw if I was going to make my living as a writer, I was going to have to begin making things up, using my imagination. The result was my first science fiction book, House of Stairs. Although I invented the plot and the setting, the characters in that book were all based on people I knew. I continue to use real people in my books, and that has gotten me into trouble at times. Fortunately, most of my friends have started speaking to me again.
Gradually, without much planning on it, I began drifting more and more into science fiction, a genre I had always loved. A lot of the fun of writing science fiction is learning about real scientific phenomena, like behavior modifications or black holes or the fourth dimension, and turning them into stories. The challenge is to try to make the parts you invent as believable as the scientific laws you are using. If you succeed, then you are giving the reader something that is magical and fantastic but at the same time might actually be possible.. That's the great thing about science fiction -- someday it could really happen.
For nine years, I also worked as a rehearsal pianist for the Boston Ballet, touring with them all over Europe and the United States, and composing three ballets that the company performed. (One of them was called Incident at Blackbriar, a nice plug for my book.) Eventually I quit because it was taking too much time away from my writing, and partly because the stressful atmosphere of a ballet company began to get to me. One of the best things about being a writer is that it's a job without a lot of stress. But I did keep notes of everything that happened: the time Giselle's house tipped over and knocked a dancer out cold, the time a dancer fell into the orchestra pit, what it was like to perform in ancient Roman amphitheaters in the rain, the kinds of things dancers say to each other onstage. I continue trying to turn it all into a book, and someday I may do it.
Now I live part of the year in Bangkok, Thailand, and part of the year in Boston. I write full- time and do a lot of serious cooking. I consider myself extremely fortunate to be able to make a living as a writer. I shouldn't ever run out of ideas -- knock on wood -- since the universe is full of great things like strange attractors and the Mandelbrot set. I still can't get over the fact that time slows down in the presence of a gravitational field. It really does, you know. That's not science fiction. It's a fact."
copyright ? 2000 by Penguin Putnam Books for Young Readers. All rights reserved.
Product details
- Publisher : Puffin Books
- Publication date : June 1, 1995
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 208 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0140375953
- ISBN-13 : 978-0140375954
- Item Weight : 3.99 ounces
- Reading age : 10 years and up
- Dimensions : 6.9 x 4.3 x 0.6 inches
- Grade level : 5 - 9
- Lexile measure : 810L
- Best Sellers Rank: #130,710 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Customers find the book's story quality positive, describing it as a fun adventure for younger readers. However, the readability receives mixed feedback, with several customers finding it difficult to read.
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Customers enjoy the story of the book, describing it as a fun and neat adventure, with one customer noting it's a solid adventure for younger kids.
"Great way to introduce a kid to Science Fiction." Read more
"...By turns adventurous and thrilling, it’s fun throughout." Read more
"The book itself is an interesting page turner. I loved it as a kid and recently rediscovered it to share with kids I know now, and it was still a..." Read more
"...On the up side, you get a great vocabulary lesson along with a fun story that even adults would enjoy!" Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability, with some finding it difficult to read and noting numerous typos, while one customer describes it as well written.
"...up on a collection of essays by Umberto Eco because the errors made the text unreadable. Caveat emptor, right?" Read more
"...expertly crafted story targeting youth and young-adults, but is so well written that adult readers will not be able to help but to enjoy it too...." Read more
"...It's really difficult to read because there are so many typos...." Read more
"...it to share with kids I know now, and it was still a good read to an adult. My only issue is that it came damaged from the third party seller." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2024Great way to introduce a kid to Science Fiction.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2014Imagine a scavenger hunt where everyone is looking for just one item, a special item, possibly a sentient item that wants to be found. I don't think that teaser will spoil the story for anyone, but it is the best, shortest sum-up of the story's concept as I can do.
Lots of aliens are looking for the interstellar pig (which could have been an interstellar rock, or coin, or something else and it wouldn't matter), because that's how to "win the game". A youth discovers the interstellar pig, which had been out of circulation for quite some time. Aliens start to show up, the game is revealed, and interesting events start to unfold.
Yet again, William Sleator writes an expertly crafted story targeting youth and young-adults, but is so well written that adult readers will not be able to help but to enjoy it too. I CAN NOT recommend his stories enough.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2021I recall this one as a beloved childhood read, and I strongly recommend it. Perhaps an early example of a litRPG, it tells the tale of a normal boy drawn into an odd board game – a sort of dungeons and dragons in space – which is more real than he expects. By turns adventurous and thrilling, it’s fun throughout.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2023I ordered this book because it was a nostalgic childhood favorite I wanted to reread without buying a pricier hardcover edition.
There were some printing errors but nothing major I couldn’t easily look past.
That’s the only reason I’m giving it 4 stars instead of 5.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2013The book itself is an interesting page turner. I loved it as a kid and recently rediscovered it to share with kids I know now, and it was still a good read to an adult. My only issue is that it came damaged from the third party seller.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2016I remember this book being read to me in Elementary school long ago. Just ran across it, had to actually read it for myself, it's actually very much a complex book. It really tests your vocabulary knowledge banks, and can help push you through new words.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2020This book was one my favorites stories in elementary school. I've been telling my son about this book for years and, now that he's old enough, I bought it for him to enjoy. The only gripe I have about this book is that you may end up having to have a dictionary near by to define some of the words or explain what they mean to an elementary age child. On the up side, you get a great vocabulary lesson along with a fun story that even adults would enjoy!
- Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2020This book is amazing. I was happy about the quick delivery and quality of the book.
Top reviews from other countries
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The Private OneReviewed in Germany on July 31, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Young Adult-Science Fiction für alle Altersklassen
Vorab: Ich lese normalerweise keine YA. Allerdings kannte ich den Autor aus meiner Kindheit - wer kennt noch das "Haus der Treppen"? -, wo er sich einen ganz speziellen Platz bei mir erschrieben hat. Dazu kommt: Dieses Buch ist nicht, was ich heute als YA kenne.
Der Plot ist überraschend (es wird von mir keine Spoiler geben), der Stil witzig und kohärent. Auch die teilweise bizarre Ausdrucksweise einiger ProtagonistInnen ist insgesamt sehr logisch und nachträglich betrachtet stilsicher. Es gibt mehrere Stellen, die mich zum Kichern gebracht haben, und an keinem Punkt wusste ich, wie die Geschichte weitergehen wird. Falls ich es irgendwo finde, werde ich auf jeden Fall den Nachfolger auch lesen. Man merkt übrigens beim Lesen auch nicht, dass das Buch mittlerweile schon im fortgeschrittenen Alter ist.
Für Science Fiction-Fans gibt es von mir eine uneingeschränkte Leseempfehlung.
- BrittReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 23, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Sheer Brilliance
As an adult, i read this straight, twice, in one afternoon. I did buy it for my children but roadtested it first. They did get to enjoy it and love it too.
- Helen PatersonReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 9, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars blast from the past!
I read this book about 12 odd years ago- the plot, although not the title stuck in my head and I've been looking for it for ages! I finally remembered the title and was straight on Amazon to buy it. It is hardly high brow literature but even now, aged 34, I enjoyed it and it had stuck in my hread all this time:)
- Miss Luisa MorenoReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 8, 2015
1.0 out of 5 stars It definately felt more like an adult or at least teenager book
This didn't live up to my expectations. I read it with my 10 yr old son and I felt it was rather slow with some adult elements. I had to skip some of the sentences... It definately felt more like an adult or at least teenager book. Just worth being aware of.