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Original Title: House of Stairs
ISBN: 0140345809 (ISBN13: 9780140345803)
Edition Language: English
Literary Awards: Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award Nominee (1976)
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House of Stairs Paperback | Pages: 176 pages
Rating: 3.85 | 4066 Users | 554 Reviews

Description Supposing Books House of Stairs

After googling different phrases for a while, I finally found the name of the book I read when I was around 12 that catapulted me into my interest into psychology and the human mind. The story of five teenagers locked in a place that consisted only of stairs and landings, the way they were trained like Pavlov's dogs to respond to the demands of a machine for food, demands that became ever more horrible. I remember reading this and being horrified by concepts I couldn't quite yet really grasp, but what stuck with me was the fact that not everyone acquiesced. The last scene of the book, with the traffic light, I think cemented my firm regard and defense of individuality, even before I could verbalize that notion. While I didn't understand it, really, as a kid, this book and the message in its story has remained with me my entire life. This would definitely be listed as one of the Impact Books in my life. I haven't re-read it as an adult yet, but I will be. It will be interesting to see how it speaks now.

Specify Containing Books House of Stairs

Title:House of Stairs
Author:William Sleator
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 176 pages
Published:April 1st 1991 by Puffin Books (first published 1974)
Categories:Young Adult. Science Fiction. Fiction. Dystopia. Horror

Rating Containing Books House of Stairs
Ratings: 3.85 From 4066 Users | 554 Reviews

Assess Containing Books House of Stairs
The concept was interesting but the reality of this book was that it was disappointing...to be polite. The characters were boring and the chances of this ever being able to happen would be extremely low if not impossible. What I couldn't figure out was why none of these 5 kids...in the absence of any adults...ever tried to escape. I guess you might view it differently if you were 13-15 years old.

"What if someone wrote 1984 for junior high school students, only made it creepier?" I read this book years ago, and have always remembered it because it was so disturbing. Guaranteed to give you a nightmare or two.

I also read this as kid.

A chilling and suspenseful tale that stick with the reader for years to come.This book is recommended for 9-12 year olds, however, I think it might be a bit intense for the younger side of this group, and I, as an adult, thoroughly enjoyed Slater's treatment of this psychological horror.Personal Note: I read this book as a tween, and it stuck with me all these years. I remember not being able to put it down, and upon revisiting it, it is still just as fascinating to me. I read many of the

I first read the synopsis for this a few years ago and the concept immediately caught my attention. Set in an unknown but clearly dystopian future, we follow five kids in their early teens who are suddenly dumped alone on a never ending room of stairs. There is a machine that spits out food but only when the group perform certain actions which they have to determine by trial and error. When the machine starts rewarding violence of the physical and psychological types the kids are pushed to

A modern classic. I read House of Stairs frequently as a child, and was happy to see this speculative novel from 1974 stands the test of time.That's because Sleator wisely keeps the "futuristic" science fiction touches to a minimum. There's a very '70s reference to air pollution, but it isn't pivotal. The rest of the book is about what doesn't change: human nature.I'm handing this to my son to read now. I have the feeling he'll be as riveted by it as I was at his age.

I didn't remember reading this as a kid until I checked out the book and saw the same cover I'd stared at when I was younger. It's kind of funny because this book is about psychological conditioning and I had a strong recognition reaction to the cover even though, like Singularity, I didn't actually remember any of the plot. In both cases, I think I didn't remember so much as internalize them. In Singularity I identified with the main character's major shift to develop independence, and in this
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