by John Hulme
c/o Big Building, Floor 143 · One Seems Plaza, The Seems
TAKE THE SEEMSIAN APTITUDE TEST (SAT)
12 questions. 200 points each
Question 1: Are you a little bored with life? Not that you’re unhappy, but have you always had this nagging feeling in the back of your mind that maybe you were meant to do something more?
A.______YES or B.______NO
Question 2: If there was a Tear in the Fabric of Reality and you were called in to handle the job, which Tool would you employ?
A.______A Rounded Scopeman 4000™
B.______A Boa Constrictor XL™
C.______A needle and thread
D.______I have no idea
Question 3: When first invented in the Department of Nature, the butterfly was originally called a:
A.______Flutterby
B.______Winged Marsupial
C.______Margarine Bird
D.______None of the above
Question 4: The best way to get to The Seems is via:
A.______Closing your eyes and tapping your heels
B.______The secret handshake
C.______A Door
D.______Knowing the combination
Question 5: The Ice Age was caused by which of the following?
A.______Thermal reduction
B.______A broken thermostat in the Department of Weather
C.______A meteor
D.______Shifting tectonic plates
Question 6: Flowers get their color by which of the following ways?
A.______Hand-painting in the Department of Nature
B.______Random genetic phenotyping
C.______Johnny Appleseed
D.______Scientists at Merck
Question 7: At a bedding convention, 400 dealers sold either blankets or sheets or both. If 163 dealers sold both blankets and sheets, and 117 dealers sold only blankets, how many dealers sold only sheets?
A.______86
B.______97
C.______104
D.______120
Question 8: What delicious fruit was invented in The Seems but was deemed “too tasty” ever to be released in The World?
A.______Watermelon
B.______Kumquat
C.______Star Fruit
D.______Dazzleberry
Question 9: The “shimmer” on lakes and rivers is a result of which of the following?
A.______Schlerein
B.______The sun
C.______Shimmer Dust
D.______Pollution
Question 10: When I die, I will go to . . .
A.______Nowhere. Worms will eat my dead, rotting corpse
B.______A Better Place
C.______Heaven
D.______Hell
Question 11: Choose the set of words that, when inserted in the sentence, best fits the meaning of the sentence as a whole.
Ms. Fergusson’s main criticism of the artist’s rendering of the ancient mammal’s physical appearance is that, unsupported by even a ———— of fossil evidence, the image is bound to be ————.
A.______modicum . . speculative
B.______particle . . supplemented
C.______perusal . . substantiated
D.______fabrication . . obsolete
Question 12: Having a job that requires you to travel between this world and another would best be described as:
A.______Sounds fun
B.______There are no other worlds
C.______A drag
D.______I’m too busy
* * *
Answer Key:
Give yourself 200 points for each correct answer:
* * *
1 . A
2 . C
3 . A
4. C
5 . B
6. A
7. D
8. D
9. C
10. B
11 . A
12. A
Now take your score and find out what level of Fixerdom you fit into:
Score of 0—800:
Score of 1000—1800:
Score of 2000—2400:
READ ON FOR A SNEAK PEEK AT BECKER’S NEXT MISSION IN
The Edge of Sanity, The Seems
Sunset Strip, a sub-department of the Department of Public Works, had been built overlooking the Stream of Consciousness, and for good reason. The Seemsian sun set in the north, casting a warm glow over the tranquil back lot, while a pleasant hike down the Path of Least Resistance led to the Stream itself. But perhaps it’s most eye-catching spot was the Edge of Sanity—a jagged outcropping high above the weaving canyon— which attracted many a Scenic looking for a never-before-imagined shade or hue. But it also drew a different sort of visitor.
“How the heck did he get all the way down there?”
Becker lay flat on his stomach and peaked over the Edge. Far below him, a lone figure was huddled on a narrow sill jutting from the face of the cliff.
“No idea,” said his Briefer, kneeling beside him. “But that rock he’s sitting on isn’t gonna hold for long.”
A queasy feeling was working its way into Becker’s stomach. He’d once had a Glimmer of Hope in mind for just such an occasion but he’d been forced to blow it on his very first Mission, so now he had to suck it up.
“Recommendation?”
“Sticky Feet™.”
“Agreed.” Becker pulled the rubber soles from his Toolkit, careful not to touch the bottoms with his hand lest he would have to go to the Department of Health and have them surgically removed. “But set me up a Safety Net™ just in case.”
- - - - - - - -
Many feet below, a tortured artist wearing a thin mustache sat with his arms around his knees. He rocked back and forth, muttering to himself, until his attention was drawn by a handful of silt that trickled down from above. Gazing up, he was amazed to see a lanky thirteen-year-old boy with shaggy hair standing at a ninety-degree angle and looking straight down the face of the cliff.
“Stop right zere!” screamed The Maestro in his thick North-Seemsany accent. This picturesque region of The Seems was famed for cultivating persons of a certain artistic flair— painters, musicians, and especially masters of culinary delights like Twists of Fate or the Snooze—but the rolling hills also engendered a particularly fiery temperament. “You no come closer or I jump!”
“I just want to talk,” said Becker, dangling over the Edge of Sanity.
“Zere nothing to talk about! It is done. Over. Finis!”
The painter punctuated the statement by slamming his fist to the ground, knocking pebbles and baseball-sized rocks out from beneath the ledge. Becker could see that The Sarge was right . . . it wouldn’t hold for long.
“Is it okay if I join you?”
The Maestro ignored him, gazing toward the water with despair. Becker took that as a yes, and found his way to a small crevice that the centuries had carved from the wall. It wasn’t much of a sitting place, so Becker kept his Feet firmly planted on the rock.
“I don’t know about you, but I’m not a big fan of high places.” The Fixer knew the key to talking him down was establishing a rapport. “It’s not that I’m afraid to fall, it’s just that there’s always this little voice in my head saying ‘jump, jump, jump’—and someday I’m afraid I’m gonna listen to it.”
“It is probably just ze Mischievous Imp,” said the Maestro without looking up.
“Nah. We caught that guy a couple years ago. He’s up in Seemsberia knitting pot holders and singing ‘Kumbaya.’ ”
Down below, the slightest of chuckles was just audible above the wind.
“Mind if I call you Figarro?”
“You can do whatever you want.”
At least he was talking now, so Becker figured this was the time to strike.
“What happened out there today?”
The Maestro shook his head angrily, but was too filled with disgust to even speak.
“Look at them over zere.” He pointed bitterly to the other side
of the canyon, where a gated community and its lavish clubhouse was perched even higher than they.“Yuppie scum in their fancy houses.”
“This isn’t about Crestview.” Becker made a harsh transition to tough love because time was running out.“This is about a very important Sunset that you were supposed to paint tonight but decided to rip into a million pieces instead.”
The Maestro flinched at the implication, and Becker knew that he was starting to get through.
“I can’t help you, Figarro. Not unless you tell me what’s wrong.”
The Maestro sat and stewed for a moment before finally speaking up.
“My entire life I work to make Sunsets zat will remind people of ze beauty of Ze World, bring zem a precious little moment at the end of another hard day. But everything I do— it is for nothing!”
Far down below, the waves in the Stream crashed against the rocks, and Becker again resisted the urge to see what would happen if he . . .
“I brush Hope in ze clouds for people of ze Philippines, and next day, zey are hit by Typhoon. I hide beautiful Memory in shade of pink, but ze person it is meant for is too sick to even look up and see!”
“The Plan works in mysterious ways,” said the Fixer.
“But why must zere be so much suffering?” The Maestro seemed to be asking himself as much as Becker. “Why cannot Ze World be a better place?”
This type of rhetoric sound awfully familiar to Becker and it forced him to ask a very uncomfortable question.
“This wouldn’t have anything to do with a certain . . . organization . . . would it?”
“How dare you accuse me of being in Ze Tide! I pour my heart and soul on ze canvas each and every day!” Figarro slid another inch forward. If this didn’t turn around in a hurry, not only would there be no Sunset, but there would be no Figarro. “But what is ze point? Ze Maestro makes no difference at all . . .”
And that’s when Becker knew what was really wrong in the Department of Public Works and how he was going to Fix it.
“Au contraire, Figarro.” Becker carefully unclipped his Blinker from his belt. Dotting the view screen of the rubber-buttoned communication device were a host of folders— individual Case Files of those who would be affected by the Sunset (or lack thereof).“With one look at this Sunset, lives can be changed forever . . .”
Down below, the man with the thin mustache slowly turned to listen.
“. . . and it’s not just people struggling. I can’t even count how many are on beaches or on hikes through a mountain pass or lying in a meadow with their best friend and don’t know they’re about to enjoy one of the greatest moments of their lives.”
“But one Sunset, my friend? What can one Sunset do against ze troubles of entire World?”
“Maybe nothing. Maybe everything.” Becker flipped over to one case in which he was personally involved. “A good friend of mine’s future may depend on him getting a little dose of Confidence tonight. But even if he looks away at just the wrong moment, or something awful happens tomorrow it doesn’t really matter. All that matters is we try.”
The Maestro looked Becker directly in the eye.
“Do you really believe zis?”
“If I didn’t, I wouldn’t be here.”
There was a long silence, and from the way Figarro peered down at the rocks below, Becker wasn’t sure whether he had gained him or lost him.
“All right, Fixer-man. Maybe ze Plan is out of our control. But if only one person in those Files of yours stops to look . . .” He rose and proudly faced Becker. “Then I shall give that person the greatest Sunset Ze World has ever—”
But before he could finish his sentence, the entire ledge the Maestro was standing on broke off and went plummeting down toward the Stream.
“Figarro!”
This time, Becker did listen to the voice in his head screaming “Jump!” Detaching from his Sticky Feet, he plummeted straight toward the Maestro, who was screaming in abject horror. It was a second or two before he caught up to the flailing painter, which only brought a small modicum of satisfaction, because it would only be a second or two more before they both smashed headlong into the rapidly approaching rocks below. But Becker knew something that Figarro didn’t. At least he hoped he did . . .
“Sarge, please tell me you set up the—”
Thwap.
The Fixer and the Maestro found themselves encircled in a ball of nylon twine, which stretched uncomfortably close to the water before recoiling back up toward the top of the cliff. Thankfully, it was connected to the twin firing mechanisms that the Sarge had undoubtedly anchored to the Edge of Sanity, and whose retractable crank was now reeling the two survivors of a near-death experience back to the top.
“How you doin’ down there, boss?” barked the Sarge over his Receiver.
“Hangin’ in there.”
The best part about a Safety Net was the safety.The whole net thing Becker could have done without, because at the moment it was imprinting a familiar waffle-shaped tattoo on their faces.
But better to be a waffle than a pancake.
Everyone Who Believed:
Jennifer Altman, Eleanor Altman, Ross Baker, Eric Bergner, the Bratters, Caroline Burfield, Becca Chapman, Evelyn Chapman, Samantha Dareff, Sandy & Harvey Dareff, Debbie & Albie, Hadley Eure, Henry Field, Todd Field, Terrapin Frazier, Ellen Hulme, Jack Ronald Hulme, David Kuhn, Rose Laurano, Julia Lazarus, Adam Levine, Elliott & Simon Liebling, Brian Lipson, Andy Liebau, Aly Mandel, Bob Marcus, Tift Merritt, John Morisano, Tim Nye, Ken Park, Julie Pepito, Ted Pryde, Carol Sawdye, Liz Schonhorst, Lucille Schulman, Deb Shapiro, Greg Siegel, Tony Gaenslen, Kenyata Sullivan, the Watermans, Victoria Wells Arms, Ann Wexler, Ari Wexler, Jamie Wexler, Philip, Ilene, Helen, Ava, Amy & Alex, and Bill & Susan. Everyone who believed but we forgot to mention they believed.
And of course, Becker Drane.
JOHN HULME AND MICHAEL WEXLER accidentally stumbled upon the existence of The Seems after opening an unlocked Door in Wilmington, North Carolina, during the summer of 1995. From that moment on, they were obsessed with the curious realm and sought to pen a book series based on their discovery. Though the project was held up in administrative Red Tape for nearly eleven years, the Powers That Be finally signed off on its release, resulting in the text you now hold.
Hulme lives with his wife, Jennifer; son, Jack; and daughter, Madeline, in a small New Jersey town with crookety sidewalks and tree-lined streets.
Wexler’s whereabouts remain unknown.
www.theseems.com
A Book Sense Pick
An Amazon.com Best Book
A Kidsreads.com Best Book
A Teenreads.com Best Book
A New York Public Library 100 Titles for
Reading and Sharing Selection
“This is a rollicking tale, with great world-building and likable characters and a strong setup for further adventures. Unlike Garth Nix’s conceptually similar The Keys to the Kingdom series, this story is upbeat and full of humor, seeming to draw a novel from David Wiesner’s Sector 7 template.” —SLJ, starred review
“The high sense of adventure and an abundance of goofball humor should appeal especially to boys.” —Publishers Weekly
“Offbeat exploration of a universe-tilting idea.” —Booklist
“A thoroughly enjoyable read, this story is as fast-paced as Becker Drane’s life. Elements of science fiction, fantasy, and myth blend to create the world of The Seems and combined with an original and clever protagonist, it makes for an unusual adventure.” —VOYA
“The authors have a firm grasp on the potential complexity of their world, and the end result can only be described as fun.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Humorous and exciting, this first book left me eager for more from this new series, and you can be sure I’ll be reading the rest.” —TeensReadToo.com
“I’m wondering what genre to place this book in—science fiction or fantasy. . . . This is a mix of both in a perfect blend! . . . I can p
romise you this—it is a LOT of fun! It is a really good read.” —Teenfx.com
“Reminiscent of the works of Jonathan Stroud and Jasper Fforde, this book makes use of amusing footnotes, a jargon-laden glossary and a guide to the unique tools wielded by the Fixers in their day-to-day routine.”
—Kidsreads.com
Text copyright © 2007 by John Hulme and Michael Wexler
Illustrations copyright © 2007 by Gideon Kendall
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
First published in the United States of America in October 2007
by Bloomsbury Books for Young Readers
E-book edition published in October 2010
www.bloomsburyteens.com
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Bloomsbury BFYR, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10010
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
Hulme, John.
The glitch in sleep / by John Hulme and Michael Wexler.
p. cm. — (The Seems ; bk. 1)
Summary: When twelve-year-old Becker Drane is recruited by The Seems, a parallel universe that runs everything in The World, he must fix a disastrous glitch in the Department of Sleep that threatens the ability of everyone to ever fall asleep again.
ISBN-13: 978-1-59990-129-9 • ISBN-10: 1-59990-129-3 (hardcover)
[1. Sleep—Fiction. 2. Technology—Fiction. 3. Space and time—Fiction.]
I. Wexler, Michael. II. Title.
PZ7.H8844G1 2007 [Fic]—dc22 2007002598
ISBN 978-1-59990-417-7 (e-book)