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The House Next Door #3

The Moon at Noon

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A door in time. A visitor from the future. A girl determined to save the boy she loves.

The third book in the mind-twisting dystopian time travel series, 'The House Next Door'

A grief-stricken Mathew Erlang travels north across an England beset by violence and sickness. Accompanied by a new friend, he finally makes it to his grandmother’s house, but all is not as it seems in this place of safety. Meanwhile, Clara makes an uncanny pact with Mathew’s peculiar neighbour.

In this, the last book in the House Next Door trilogy, family secrets are revealed, and we finally learn the truth about Mr. Lestrange.

229 pages, Paperback

First published December 22, 2015

32 people are currently reading
552 people want to read

About the author

Jule Owen

15 books149 followers
Jule Owen was born in the North of England and now lives in London. She spent many years working in online technology, latterly in the video games industry and is fascinated by science, technology, futurology and terrified by climate change.

She can be found online and would love to hear from you. Look her up here:
www.juleowen.com

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5 stars
82 (50%)
4 stars
62 (38%)
3 stars
18 (11%)
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1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Mark Speed.
Author 18 books83 followers
December 22, 2015
Wow - just wow! What a magnificent reveal! Since getting hooked on books one and two, I'd wondered how the author was going to pull all the strands together. Without wanting to give too much away, I'd also been wondering about the whole nature of Mr Lestrange, and what was really going on. As we've come to expect, the writing is absolutely beautiful. This series has been a real joy for me to read this year. I think we'll look back at this year and see that Jule Owen has cemented her place as a significant voice in environmental futurology.
Profile Image for Omg.
9 reviews4 followers
April 24, 2021
Well, for a start, I think the first book in a trilogy was a bit mysterious, thus attractive. Enjoyed it, but wouldn't be one of my favorites, even though I wouldn't have anything bad to say about it. However, half way into second book I was amazed at all creativity in the story, and the mind behind this book, and also with how things are getting more mysterious, which makes me more curious as to where all the story is leading. And so after reading the second book, I knew that not reading third one is impossible, and I really enjoyed it, with my amazement increasing with each chapter. I would like to see it, live it, experience it. Big bravo to the author!
Profile Image for Bryn Holmes.
50 reviews1 follower
February 21, 2021
I enjoyed the premise of this book but do not do what I did and start with The Moon at Noon. Go and find Julie Owen's The Boy Who Fell from the Sky. Although the book is well written and interesting as a stand alone, it's the pulling together all the different facets of Mathew's experience that really makes this book sing. The ending will mean a lot more if you read through the whole series.

He is likely to turn up any moment now and she is in turmoil.

Happy reading!
46 reviews3 followers
October 24, 2020
Great ending

This is Book 3 of that amazing post modern mind bender series disguised as a Young Adult Sci Fi trilogy. All three books are the best.
Profile Image for Dan Nordquist.
Author 3 books1 follower
January 10, 2023
An incredible and unique story!

I won’t give any spoilers but this is a great mix of sci-fi and time travel. Loved it!

Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Phillip Sanderson.
3 reviews3 followers
December 30, 2015
When I read the first book in a series and love it, I am typically disappointed in the follow-ups. Even those that get made into high budget movies. Yet I refuse to lose hope that there will be an author who can deliver a trilogy of consistent imagination and quality. Congratulations to Jule Owen. From the first revelations in The Boy Who Fell from the Sky to the final ones in The Moon at Noon, I was enthralled.

First, her vision of the future is absolutely clear in her mind and vividly rendered. Few SF novels have seemed so possible to me a real future arc. The combination and contrast of advanced technologies with a new social order and politics driven by extreme climate change seem more relevant than anything else I have recently read. As I read the books, I watched news pieces of both war and climate change that made the books seem eerily prescient.

Second, each book held more of the new, even within the schema set out in the original book. Credit Jule with creating a rich enough environment that she was always able to use that structure to create and reveal things that were novel to the reader.

Third, the final book came with revelations that were intricately woven through the first two. The plots of these books were not made up as they went along. From start to finish, this trilogy felt like a single well-conceived book.

Fourth, there are complexities that arise from the plot (especially in this third book) that made my head swim a little. Jule handles these moments deftly.

Well done. I hope to read more from Jule Owen.
2 reviews1 follower
March 13, 2016
Time travel and all its implications. I love reading anything which has this embedded in the storyline. It sets me thinking and this is what this book is intended to do, while still being an effortless, enjoyable read. "I think you have a story to tell your older self." Can the young somehow be wiser than their older counterparts? Is it all about what we are exposed to and the experiences we have?

By the time I got to this third book in the trilogy, I was so eager to find out how it would conclude but at the same time was left wanting to read more. I am encouraged by the fact that we are told it's not the end of the story. And of course, it isn't. The details of the story may fade in our memories - I read this a few months ago already - but the important message vis-à-vis climate change remains intact.

For me, the author's writing skill and proficiency develops along with the plot. The characters grow to the extent that we see an older and younger version of them and I became fully absorbed in the twists and turns as we are all moved from one year to another. Good guys, bad guys, gadgets with a hint of magic, suspense, emotion and the complexity of human behaviour and its motives: it's all there.

Looking forward to more from this writer who I'm sure has a lot more in store.
Profile Image for Marilyn.
90 reviews2 followers
January 7, 2016
This whole series is very entertaining and thought provoking. The possibilities in the future, mind boggling. I like the high moral standards the main character and his family have. They are actually very selfless. I got just a tiny bit bogged down with lots of information given to us at one point, but once I got past that the story really picked up.
The story is very well written and I could easily picture the world described to the reader. This author is very creative.
I would recommend this series to anyone interested in what the world and its problems might be in the future and also just for a great entertaining read.
Profile Image for Jen.
438 reviews
May 16, 2016
** I received a copy of this book for free through a Goodreads giveaway. **

I really enjoyed this solid and satisfying conclusion to the House Next Door trilogy. The characters were engaging and the story was very well told. I particularly liked the switches between present and future. I would have liked to know more about what happens next but I suppose I will have to live with my thoughts on what was written.
152 reviews2 followers
January 20, 2016
Wow!

I don't usually spend so much for e books, but this series is worth every penny. I'm sorry it's finished and I'm hoping that we get to hear more from Matt and the 16. I'd also like to read the story of how George ends up being in Matthew's life.
Profile Image for Mike.
752 reviews
August 27, 2016
A fun, quick read, the conclusion to the trilogy. I think it's a YA novel. I enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Susan.
966 reviews19 followers
February 26, 2016
Wow, great ending to a great series. Highly recommend. I won this book through Goodreads
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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