Story about a quantum hedge maze












14















I read this story about 10 years ago, though I don't believe it was a new story by the time I read it. This story likely came out in the 80s-90s. The main plot dealt with a mysterious garden behind a house, which contained a hedge maze. Entering and exiting the maze would leave you in a slightly different version of the world, depending on how many different turns you took while in the maze. Going a single turn into the maze and returning could leave you in a location where only minor changes had occurred (e.g. what others had for lunch), but going deeper could lead to drastic changes in the surrounding world. While it likely wasn't explicitly said, there was some indication that this had to do with some quantum effect, and was demonstrating many-worlds. This is not the story mentioned here or here and is not The Garden of Forking Paths, though the theme of bifurcation/many worlds is similar.



Additional story details:




  • The story was written in English, and was either a short story or part of an anthology of short stories.

  • Only the person moving through the maze recognized the changes between the worlds accessed; those outside the maze simply existed in the new "world".

  • The main character did not understand the influence the maze had at first, and only realized after noticing small changes (another person no longer had glasses and was convinced that they never had glasses).

  • The main character had some driving reason for continued exploration of the maze, but exploration eventually just lead to an even worse world, ending with the main character lost with no way back to their original world.

  • The "quantum/many worlds" aspect of the maze could have been implied, possibly by the former house/garden owner being a quantum physicist, but this was not directly stated.

  • One of the characters was partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. They attempted to use the maze to reach a world where they could walk normally.


I vaguely remember another story that may have been in the same anthology, if this was in fact grouped together. The only clear memory of this story is imagery of a snake eating its own tail, which was relevant due to some time travel (that was only accessible at certain locations) occurring in the story.










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  • Welcome to SFF! Great question!

    – Lexible
    Nov 27 '18 at 3:20
















14















I read this story about 10 years ago, though I don't believe it was a new story by the time I read it. This story likely came out in the 80s-90s. The main plot dealt with a mysterious garden behind a house, which contained a hedge maze. Entering and exiting the maze would leave you in a slightly different version of the world, depending on how many different turns you took while in the maze. Going a single turn into the maze and returning could leave you in a location where only minor changes had occurred (e.g. what others had for lunch), but going deeper could lead to drastic changes in the surrounding world. While it likely wasn't explicitly said, there was some indication that this had to do with some quantum effect, and was demonstrating many-worlds. This is not the story mentioned here or here and is not The Garden of Forking Paths, though the theme of bifurcation/many worlds is similar.



Additional story details:




  • The story was written in English, and was either a short story or part of an anthology of short stories.

  • Only the person moving through the maze recognized the changes between the worlds accessed; those outside the maze simply existed in the new "world".

  • The main character did not understand the influence the maze had at first, and only realized after noticing small changes (another person no longer had glasses and was convinced that they never had glasses).

  • The main character had some driving reason for continued exploration of the maze, but exploration eventually just lead to an even worse world, ending with the main character lost with no way back to their original world.

  • The "quantum/many worlds" aspect of the maze could have been implied, possibly by the former house/garden owner being a quantum physicist, but this was not directly stated.

  • One of the characters was partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. They attempted to use the maze to reach a world where they could walk normally.


I vaguely remember another story that may have been in the same anthology, if this was in fact grouped together. The only clear memory of this story is imagery of a snake eating its own tail, which was relevant due to some time travel (that was only accessible at certain locations) occurring in the story.










share|improve this question

























  • Welcome to SFF! Great question!

    – Lexible
    Nov 27 '18 at 3:20














14












14








14


3






I read this story about 10 years ago, though I don't believe it was a new story by the time I read it. This story likely came out in the 80s-90s. The main plot dealt with a mysterious garden behind a house, which contained a hedge maze. Entering and exiting the maze would leave you in a slightly different version of the world, depending on how many different turns you took while in the maze. Going a single turn into the maze and returning could leave you in a location where only minor changes had occurred (e.g. what others had for lunch), but going deeper could lead to drastic changes in the surrounding world. While it likely wasn't explicitly said, there was some indication that this had to do with some quantum effect, and was demonstrating many-worlds. This is not the story mentioned here or here and is not The Garden of Forking Paths, though the theme of bifurcation/many worlds is similar.



Additional story details:




  • The story was written in English, and was either a short story or part of an anthology of short stories.

  • Only the person moving through the maze recognized the changes between the worlds accessed; those outside the maze simply existed in the new "world".

  • The main character did not understand the influence the maze had at first, and only realized after noticing small changes (another person no longer had glasses and was convinced that they never had glasses).

  • The main character had some driving reason for continued exploration of the maze, but exploration eventually just lead to an even worse world, ending with the main character lost with no way back to their original world.

  • The "quantum/many worlds" aspect of the maze could have been implied, possibly by the former house/garden owner being a quantum physicist, but this was not directly stated.

  • One of the characters was partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. They attempted to use the maze to reach a world where they could walk normally.


I vaguely remember another story that may have been in the same anthology, if this was in fact grouped together. The only clear memory of this story is imagery of a snake eating its own tail, which was relevant due to some time travel (that was only accessible at certain locations) occurring in the story.










share|improve this question
















I read this story about 10 years ago, though I don't believe it was a new story by the time I read it. This story likely came out in the 80s-90s. The main plot dealt with a mysterious garden behind a house, which contained a hedge maze. Entering and exiting the maze would leave you in a slightly different version of the world, depending on how many different turns you took while in the maze. Going a single turn into the maze and returning could leave you in a location where only minor changes had occurred (e.g. what others had for lunch), but going deeper could lead to drastic changes in the surrounding world. While it likely wasn't explicitly said, there was some indication that this had to do with some quantum effect, and was demonstrating many-worlds. This is not the story mentioned here or here and is not The Garden of Forking Paths, though the theme of bifurcation/many worlds is similar.



Additional story details:




  • The story was written in English, and was either a short story or part of an anthology of short stories.

  • Only the person moving through the maze recognized the changes between the worlds accessed; those outside the maze simply existed in the new "world".

  • The main character did not understand the influence the maze had at first, and only realized after noticing small changes (another person no longer had glasses and was convinced that they never had glasses).

  • The main character had some driving reason for continued exploration of the maze, but exploration eventually just lead to an even worse world, ending with the main character lost with no way back to their original world.

  • The "quantum/many worlds" aspect of the maze could have been implied, possibly by the former house/garden owner being a quantum physicist, but this was not directly stated.

  • One of the characters was partially paralyzed and confined to a wheelchair. They attempted to use the maze to reach a world where they could walk normally.


I vaguely remember another story that may have been in the same anthology, if this was in fact grouped together. The only clear memory of this story is imagery of a snake eating its own tail, which was relevant due to some time travel (that was only accessible at certain locations) occurring in the story.







story-identification






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edited Nov 24 '18 at 10:01







meson800

















asked Nov 24 '18 at 9:44









meson800meson800

2437




2437













  • Welcome to SFF! Great question!

    – Lexible
    Nov 27 '18 at 3:20



















  • Welcome to SFF! Great question!

    – Lexible
    Nov 27 '18 at 3:20

















Welcome to SFF! Great question!

– Lexible
Nov 27 '18 at 3:20





Welcome to SFF! Great question!

– Lexible
Nov 27 '18 at 3:20










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















13














The Last Universe by William Sleator contains a 'quantum hedge maze'




In The Last Universe, Susan is forced to care for her sick older brother, Gary. Every day since Gary has become wheelchair-bound, he has insisted on Susan wheeling him into the expansive garden behind their ancestral home. Susan has always been afraid of the garden and becomes even more so when tropical plants spring up overnight among the native Massachusetts flowers. Other odd things begin to happen, too, such as paths suddenly coming out in different parts of the garden. Even though Susan wants to stay away from the garden, Gary insists that something in it is going to make him better. One day, they discover what this something is – a quantum hedge maze built by their scientist great-uncle. Soon, however, the teens realize that not only can the maze make Gary better, it can also make things a lot worse.




enter image description here






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  • Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

    – meson800
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:15











  • @meson800 - Glad to help

    – Valorum
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:40



















7














The key detail that I didn't remember at first was that one of the characters was wheelchair-bound because of an unspecified illness.



The story is The Last Universe by William Sleator. Instead of a single character exploring the maze, two siblings do. The brother, who is wheelchair bound, wants to explore the maze to find a world where he is not sick, whereas the sister is more cautious.






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

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    active

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    active

    oldest

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    13














    The Last Universe by William Sleator contains a 'quantum hedge maze'




    In The Last Universe, Susan is forced to care for her sick older brother, Gary. Every day since Gary has become wheelchair-bound, he has insisted on Susan wheeling him into the expansive garden behind their ancestral home. Susan has always been afraid of the garden and becomes even more so when tropical plants spring up overnight among the native Massachusetts flowers. Other odd things begin to happen, too, such as paths suddenly coming out in different parts of the garden. Even though Susan wants to stay away from the garden, Gary insists that something in it is going to make him better. One day, they discover what this something is – a quantum hedge maze built by their scientist great-uncle. Soon, however, the teens realize that not only can the maze make Gary better, it can also make things a lot worse.




    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
























    • Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

      – meson800
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:15











    • @meson800 - Glad to help

      – Valorum
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:40
















    13














    The Last Universe by William Sleator contains a 'quantum hedge maze'




    In The Last Universe, Susan is forced to care for her sick older brother, Gary. Every day since Gary has become wheelchair-bound, he has insisted on Susan wheeling him into the expansive garden behind their ancestral home. Susan has always been afraid of the garden and becomes even more so when tropical plants spring up overnight among the native Massachusetts flowers. Other odd things begin to happen, too, such as paths suddenly coming out in different parts of the garden. Even though Susan wants to stay away from the garden, Gary insists that something in it is going to make him better. One day, they discover what this something is – a quantum hedge maze built by their scientist great-uncle. Soon, however, the teens realize that not only can the maze make Gary better, it can also make things a lot worse.




    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer
























    • Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

      – meson800
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:15











    • @meson800 - Glad to help

      – Valorum
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:40














    13












    13








    13







    The Last Universe by William Sleator contains a 'quantum hedge maze'




    In The Last Universe, Susan is forced to care for her sick older brother, Gary. Every day since Gary has become wheelchair-bound, he has insisted on Susan wheeling him into the expansive garden behind their ancestral home. Susan has always been afraid of the garden and becomes even more so when tropical plants spring up overnight among the native Massachusetts flowers. Other odd things begin to happen, too, such as paths suddenly coming out in different parts of the garden. Even though Susan wants to stay away from the garden, Gary insists that something in it is going to make him better. One day, they discover what this something is – a quantum hedge maze built by their scientist great-uncle. Soon, however, the teens realize that not only can the maze make Gary better, it can also make things a lot worse.




    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer













    The Last Universe by William Sleator contains a 'quantum hedge maze'




    In The Last Universe, Susan is forced to care for her sick older brother, Gary. Every day since Gary has become wheelchair-bound, he has insisted on Susan wheeling him into the expansive garden behind their ancestral home. Susan has always been afraid of the garden and becomes even more so when tropical plants spring up overnight among the native Massachusetts flowers. Other odd things begin to happen, too, such as paths suddenly coming out in different parts of the garden. Even though Susan wants to stay away from the garden, Gary insists that something in it is going to make him better. One day, they discover what this something is – a quantum hedge maze built by their scientist great-uncle. Soon, however, the teens realize that not only can the maze make Gary better, it can also make things a lot worse.




    enter image description here







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Nov 24 '18 at 10:09









    ValorumValorum

    406k10929513176




    406k10929513176













    • Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

      – meson800
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:15











    • @meson800 - Glad to help

      – Valorum
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:40



















    • Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

      – meson800
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:15











    • @meson800 - Glad to help

      – Valorum
      Nov 24 '18 at 10:40

















    Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

    – meson800
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:15





    Great find! I think we managed to ninja each other; I saw the "one new answer" banner as I clicked submit. Your answer is more helpful for others :)

    – meson800
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:15













    @meson800 - Glad to help

    – Valorum
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:40





    @meson800 - Glad to help

    – Valorum
    Nov 24 '18 at 10:40













    7














    The key detail that I didn't remember at first was that one of the characters was wheelchair-bound because of an unspecified illness.



    The story is The Last Universe by William Sleator. Instead of a single character exploring the maze, two siblings do. The brother, who is wheelchair bound, wants to explore the maze to find a world where he is not sick, whereas the sister is more cautious.






    share|improve this answer




























      7














      The key detail that I didn't remember at first was that one of the characters was wheelchair-bound because of an unspecified illness.



      The story is The Last Universe by William Sleator. Instead of a single character exploring the maze, two siblings do. The brother, who is wheelchair bound, wants to explore the maze to find a world where he is not sick, whereas the sister is more cautious.






      share|improve this answer


























        7












        7








        7







        The key detail that I didn't remember at first was that one of the characters was wheelchair-bound because of an unspecified illness.



        The story is The Last Universe by William Sleator. Instead of a single character exploring the maze, two siblings do. The brother, who is wheelchair bound, wants to explore the maze to find a world where he is not sick, whereas the sister is more cautious.






        share|improve this answer













        The key detail that I didn't remember at first was that one of the characters was wheelchair-bound because of an unspecified illness.



        The story is The Last Universe by William Sleator. Instead of a single character exploring the maze, two siblings do. The brother, who is wheelchair bound, wants to explore the maze to find a world where he is not sick, whereas the sister is more cautious.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 24 '18 at 10:09









        meson800meson800

        2437




        2437






























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