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Overview
High school senior Rainbow is trapped with three other teens in a game-like world that may or may not be real. Together, they must complete quests and gain experience in order to access their own forgotten memories, decode what has happened to them, and find a portal home.
As Rainbow’s memories slowly return, the story of a lonely teen facing senior year as the new kid in a small town emerges. Surreal, absurdist humor balances sensitively handled themes of suicide, depression, and the search for identity in an unpredictable and ultimately hopeful page-turner that's perfect for fans of Shaun David Hutchinson, Adam Silvera, and Libba Bray's Going Bovine.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780358379805 |
---|---|
Publisher: | HarperCollins |
Publication date: | 08/10/2021 |
Sold by: | HARPERCOLLINS |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 336 |
File size: | 5 MB |
Age Range: | 12 - 18 Years |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
1.You Can’t Remember Your Name
You find yourself in the dark one day, standing in the middle of the dusky ocean fog, and you can’t remember your name. It’s something random, like Luca or Jamie, but neither of those, and you’re maybe like ages fourteen through seventeen, and you think you might be a girl? But you could also just as easily be a boy, or maybe neither? Also, you can’t touch your pants. Every time you try, your hand is repelled like a magnet and there’s a sound like BRRZAP!
More on that problem later.
Here are some other things you can’t remember:
The town you live in.
The street you live on.
The name of the school you go to.
The names of any bands or celebrities.
Or beverages.
Or clothing brands.
What the bottoms of shoes are called.
Your brother’s face.
And probably a lot of other stuff that you aren’t even aware of because you’ve already forgotten about it all entirely.
Honestly, the situation is starting to freak you out a little.
You’re standing in the middle of the dark ocean fog, looking out at more fog, and it’s like it just goes on forever. And that’s all there is. Just the swirling fog, and you, and the absence of your memory. You think, How did I get here? But you can’t remember.
What do you remember?
You need to remember something.
You stand in the fog, and you try to remember.
We’re driving to our new home on the coast. Mom’s got a job working as a night nurse, and she’s telling us all about it, how excited she is, how hopeful for a bright, new beginning. She’s doing that thing where she just talks and talks and talks. It’s really beautiful, the way her mouth moves. The sunlight is shining through the window and reflecting off a phone charging on the dashboard. I’m in the front seat and my brother, CJ, is stretched out in the back, snoring. This is maybe a year after the divorce.
We’re “relocating” to a little seaside tourist town with gray mansions stacked along the beach, two skate parks, five kite shops, and one supermarket. The rents are impossibly high, and the only place we can find is a mobile home eight miles up the coast. I’ve never lived in a mobile home park before. The homes aren’t mobile, and it isn’t a park. There’s the highway on one side and a gravel lot on the other, and there’s nowhere to go but the beach, which is usually windy, rainy, or both. Like, Thanks, I hate it.
There’s an old woman who lives in a yellow trailer by the gate. She’s basically the unofficial greeter. I don’t know her name, but in my head I have begun calling her “Muriel.” She has a shiny, pink coat and a cat that I’ve named “Goldfish,” and the two of them are usually out under the awning, Muriel in her metal chair and Goldfish on the ground underneath. She’s a curious, I’d even say judgmental, kind of cat, watching me like she’s deciding whether I’m worth the trouble of keeping around or not.
Pretty much every morning as I leave for school, I see Muriel and Goldfish, and Goldfish judges me, and Muriel smiles and waves. She has a really nice way of waving, just so utterly cheerful, stretching her arms up and twinkling her fingers, and sometimes Muriel’s wave is like the best thing that happens to me all day.
One afternoon I come home from school and there’s an ambulance by the gate with its lights on, and all the neighbors are outside, and a creepy old man I’ve never seen before puts his hand on my shoulder and tells me Muriel has fallen and broken her hip, and they are taking her away, and she smiles and gives me one last wave from the gurney, eyes sparkling, and that’s the last time I ever see her.
Goldfish shows up a few nights later, meowing outside our trailer. I open the door, and she just hops up the steps and marches in like a queen, heading straight for the kitchen like she owns the place. Mom is all for keeping her. She loves animals, and I do too, and so does CJ. The only reason we don’t have a cat or a dog now is our sweet, ancient Booper died of cancer a year ago, just before the divorce, and Mom still hasn’t really gotten over it.
But so here is Goldfish, and suddenly we have a cat. Or, at least, we are feeding a cat. Or I am feeding a cat. She’s pretty aloof, and in some weird way this makes her instantly part of the family. She eats our food, lets me pet her sometimes, but mostly she just wanders around outside. She’s always showing up in the randomest places: curled up on top of a mailbox, slinking out of a bush, crouched behind a paper bag. It’s like she’s still looking for her old spot under Muriel’s chair.
My brother is a total hoarder, or maybe he’s just messy, but either way he likes to live in filth and squalor. I don’t know where he gets them, but he’s always coming home with weird broken things. One day he’ll have a little kid’s bike with a missing chain, and the next day it will be a cracked djembe drum, and a week later the drum will be gone and he’ll have, like, an empty fish tank and a skateboard.
Not long after we move to the coast, CJ gets this little electronic keyboard, halfway between a toy and musical instrument, and it immediately becomes the most annoying thing in the entire universe. It has all these sound effects, lasers, bells, falling planes, air raid sirens and humans shouting, and when I’m around, CJ likes to mash them all together, and it sounds like the end of the world.
A month later, CJ ends up with a van. It’s a blue minivan, a total beater with a crushed bumper and missing rear window. Mom is aghast. But it’s too late. The title is in his name. She lectures him on responsibility, safety, and maintenance, and in the end she lets him keep it. It’s his first car, and it immediately fills with papers and trash. And the smell—like a wet dog rolled in a dead skunk and then shook all over the upholstery. I’m always trying to get CJ to clean it out or at least get an air freshener, because now this crappy hoarder van is how we get back and forth to high school.
It’s Thanksgiving, and Mom is working, and CJ and I are supposed to order a pizza with the money she left on the table, but we don’t really talk anymore and neither of us is hungry, so I’m just sitting in the living room looking at my phone, glancing out the window from time to time to see if Goldfish is going to show up . . . when I hear this distant song drifting down the hall.
I follow the song to CJ’s room and stand at his door listening. At first I think it’s music from a game or something, and I sort of like it—it’s interesting—this disco beat with a keyboard sound over it. It’s kind of happy, but then it gets sad, and right when I’ve had enough of the sadness, it gets dark, and then it turns triumphant, a crescendo of victory and joy, and in the final glorious moment, he messes up a chord, and everything instantly falls into a cacophony of frustration. It’s totally my brother.
Later, when I see him in the hall, I ask him how he learned to play it.
“Play what?” he asks.
“The song you were playing. Where’s it from?”
“I wrote it,” he says.
“You wrote it?”
“Yeah,” he says. “It sucks, I know.”
“What?”
“You don’t have to tell me.”
“What?”
He’s heading into his room. The door clicks shut.
I stand in the hall considering what I should do. It occurs to me we just had the longest conversation we’ve had all week. I almost knock on his door, but then I shrug and head back to the living room and take out my phone. In the back of my mind I keep thinking about how I really should tell him how actually his song is pretty great. Because it really is, and he’s so sensitive and hard on himself all the time.
But then, I don’t know what happens. I guess I don’t tell him soon enough, and time passes, and the song starts to get annoying. CJ plays it all the time, like obsessively, so now I can’t compliment him because it would only encourage him more.
For the entire winter, it’s all he ever does, just messes around with that one song, over and over, rotating the same four parts—happy, sad, dark, triumphant—and when he isn’t working on it, he’s blasting it on his speakers, and I finally corner him in the kitchen and tell him, “Are you trying to make the most annoying song ever? Because congratulations you’ve done it.” CJ laughs and flips me off, but after that I don’t hear the song anymore. (Like I said, he can be really sensitive.)
It’s getting late. I’m out on the beach looking for CJ. It’s urgent. The sun is going down, and the wind is sweeping a wall of fog in from the ocean, and it’s starting to rain. Drops zip randomly from out of the twilight to sting my face. It’s too cold to be in this weather in just a hoodie. I pull my hands into my sleeves and hug myself against the wind.
This is stupid, I think. He isn’t out here.
I text him again.
I try calling.
He doesn’t answer.
I tell myself I should turn back but I just keep going.
And the fog. Here it comes.
It can happen so fast, rolling in from the horizon. It just keeps getting thicker, blotting out the sky and the ocean and the dunes and the trees, blotting out everything, hugging the world in a fuzzy, cold blanket.
Where is CJ?
I’m running now.
I’m—
Wait. Something is different.
Table of Contents
1 You Can't Remember Your Name 1
mem00168w (a bright new beginning) 2
mem01171m (the van) 4
mem01172i (happysaddarktriumphant) 5
mem01907i (the fog) 6
2 Something Isn't Right 8
3 The Field 10
4 You Are Not Humming a Song 16
5 You Are Here 18
6 The Refugee Camp 23
mem00018c (the most beautiful) 27
mem01893i (rainbow) 27
mem01016i (everyone dies) 28
7 Hello? Is Anyone There? 30
mem01907j (the cave) 32
mem01608t ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 36
mem01609i ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 37
mem01610t ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 37
mem01590i (your heavy use of expletives is distracting) 38
8 Lunch Is a Turkey Sandwich 41
9 Chad01 44
10 Ten Thousand Paces 52
11 Echo Joy 57
mem01093i (at some point you just disappear) 63
12 Cry for Your Brother 66
mem01861i (the darkness glows) 68
mem01168w (this stupid challenge) 69
13 Next Level 71
mem01869a (our common suffering) 73
14 The Wandering Song 75
mem01611h ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 77
15 Machine Forest 79
16 Sour 86
17 The Hand 93
18 The Fear 97
mem01893a (only joking) 100
19 Ice 104
20 It's All Stories 109
mem01901i (what kind of a person) 112
21 Crack 114
mem01902i (go away) 115
22 Don't Eat the Flowers 118
mem01309w (ski trip) 122
23 Prepare for Ski Quest 126
24 Ski Quest 132
mem01292m (snow) 136
25 The Desert 139
26 Road Trip 143
27 Fire Spell 150
mem01632a (eight months of dave) 153
28 Where Is It 155
mem01612h ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 157
29 Out to Lunch 158
30 The Kid 161
31 The Plan 167
mem01613t ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 171
32 One Precious Memory 173
33 Now Everyone Loathes You 178
34 One Hundred Years of Solitude 186
35 Can You Keep a Secret? 190
36 Stupid Dance 193
mem01076o (dance party) 197
37 On the Bright Side 200
38 I Survived 1000 Nights of Darkness 203
39 The Wizard of This Level 207
40 Just Absolutely Repugnant 211
41 Night Screamer Mini-Quest 215
42 Mind the Gap 219
mem01907i (the cliffs) 225
43 I Told You Not to Look at Those Things 227
mem01614a ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 229
mem01615t ("The Eternal God/dess of Teen Depression") 229
44 All Bodies of Sunlit Water 231
45 The Nightmare Tree 235
46 Their Gory Visages 240
mem01907i (six new messages) 242
47 So Disrespectful 244
48 It's the Thought That Counts 252
mem01908i (dark thought) 254
49 They Have to Feed Us Don't They? 256
50 Congratulations You Got Me to Be Sincere 259
51 The Tower in the Tower 264
52 Answer Bright 269
53 Clap Your Hands 274
54 Run 276
55 Return to the Gap 279
56 When She Went Out 282
mem01908m (stop being) 286
57 Is This Death 288
58 The Lake of the Goldfish Moon 293
mem01909m (i am falling) 297
59 Wake Up 299
60 Crazy 303
61 Sorry 307
62 The Home Portal 311
63 The Forest Rumbles 316
mem01910a (in the waves) 317
64 Wave After Wave 319
mem01899i (Epilogue I) 319
mem01616t (Epilogue II) 321