In the Fire world, seventeen-year-old Leah is the illegitimate daughter of one of the realm's most powerful lords. She's hot-blooded-able to communicate with the tempestuous volcano gods that either bless a civilization or destroy it. But then Leah discovers she's a Caller, gifted with the unique-and dangerous-ability to "call" her Otherselves in mirror worlds. And her father will do anything to use her powers for his own purposes.
In the Water world, Holly nearly drowns when she sees-and interacts with-Leah, a mirror image of herself. She's rescued by Ryan, a boy from school with a secret he'd die to protect. Little do they know, his Otherself is the son of a powerful volcano god at war in the Fire world…and he's about to fall.
As Leah and Holly's lives intersect, the Fire and Water worlds descend into darkness. The only way to protect the mirror worlds is to break every rule they've ever known. If they don't, the evil seeping through the mirrors will destroy everything-and everyone-they love…
Guest blog by Nicole Luiken
- Sliders This '90s TV show dealt with a group of students and their
prof who ended up "sliding" between various parallel Earths in
an attempt to find their way back to their own universe. Each universe
looked mostly like ours but proved to have a subtle difference. The
physics prof was played by Rhys-Davies, who is actually rather tall when
not shrunk down to dwarf size for his role as Gimli in LOTR
- Buffy the
Vampire Slayer
featured a parallel universe, in which most of the regular cast were
either dead or vampires in the episodes "The Wish" and "Doppelgangland".
My husband and I are rewatching this series with our fifteen-year-old son.
- Fringe. This popular
SF TV show followed FBI agent Olivia Dunn as she investigated strange
paranormal and fringe science phenomena with the help of Walter Bishop and
his son Peter. In later seasons, it featured several different versions of
Earth. In the main Earth Walter Bishop was a crazed genius, his so-called
'Walternate' was the Secretary of Defense. Big difference.
- Once Upon a Time TV show. The
Evil Queen's curse removed all the fairy tale characters from their magic
lands, gave them amnesia and placed them in an ordinary American town of
Storybrook. I loved how each episode featured a flashback retold fairytale
storyline as well as the main Storybrook plot.
- Awake TV show. This one's a little more obscure and only lasted a season, but I really liked it. Jason Isaacs (otherwise known as Lucius Malfoy) played a cop who'd been in a car accident with his family several months before. In one world, his son had died, but every time he went to sleep he would wake in a subtly-gray world in which his son had survived but his wife had died instead.
1 comments:
Such an interesting summary.
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