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Flashforward (1999)

par Robert J. Sawyer

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2,1191077,613 (3.52)87
Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:

Two minutes and seventeen seconds that changed the world

A scientific experiment begins, and as the button is pressed, the unexpected occurs: all seven billion people on Earth black out for more than two minutes. Millions die as planes fall from the sky, people tumble down staircases, and cars plow into each other. During that time, everyone's consciousness is catapulted more than twenty years into the future. At the end of those moments, when the world reawakens, all human life is transformed by foreknowledge.

Was that shocking revelation a peek at the real, unalterable future, or was it only one of many possible futures? What happens when a man tries to change it, like the doctor who has twenty years to try to prevent his own murder? How will the foreknowledge of a part of "then" affect the experience of the "now"?

.
… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    Sphère par Michael Crichton (SFdolon)
    SFdolon: Best Michael Crichton book, a story about the repercussions of an unexpected scientific discovery.
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For one of Sawyer's more well-known titles, I found this Flashforward curiously unsatisfying. I loved the scientific and philosophical points conveyed. But overall, neither the characters or plot grabbed me the way most of his novels do. ( )
  Treebeard_404 | Jan 23, 2024 |
I hate to say this.... because I know I'll catch a lot of flak for it, but.... this is one case where the TV series really is better than the book.

This is not to say that the book is bad. It's sorta average, a quick read with a lot of physics made very easily understandable by the layman, which is a feat in and of itself. (Although, I'll admit that I read some of the more interesting bits of physics to my physics-obsessed boyfriend and was rewarded with a rant of epic proportions about how it was all fuzzed. And honestly, a lot of it was.)

The climax itself was the biggest anti-climax I've ever read. Well, maybe not the biggest, but the book just took every bit of suspense available and just flattened it.

So, in summation, if you're curious where the series came from, go ahead and read it. It's fast. Just ...get it from the library or something. ( )
  lyrrael | Aug 3, 2023 |
A good first act, but you get the sense that this was a short story or novella that was dragged out a bit. I didn't really care about the murder plot.

Also, the interesting bit with Cheung--I could swear it was an homage to Baxter and Clarke's The Light of Other Days, but Sawyer's novel actually came out a year before that. ( )
  Kavinay | Jan 2, 2023 |
Enjoyable science fiction tale of near future. Written in 1999, set in 2009 with an event that took place in 2030. Explores issue of if you know what the future holds can it be changed? ( )
  cbinstead | Sep 13, 2022 |
The novel opens in the year 2009 - it was really written ten years earlier - as Lloyd Simcoe, Theo Procopides (Lloyd's partner), and Michiko Komura (Lloyd's fiancee) preparing to engage the Large Hadron Collider. Their intention is to create the Higgs boson - yeah, I was a little lost here, as well - but instead cause a world-wide time displacement, jumping consciousness all over the world twenty-one years into the future.

Lloyd sees himself, as an older man, in bed with a woman who isn't Michiko; Michiko sees herself with young daughter; while, Theo sees nothing, just a time jump to after the incident. Now each of them are sent forward, making attempts to disprove - or, in Lloyd's case, to prove - that the future is not immutable.

I'll admit this: Sawyer lost me several times in his text. The characters are flat, but that's the fatal flaw with science fiction, and the description of places tends to drag more than it should. His explanation of the science behind his novel is exceptional, but many times I found myself reaching over and Googling a few of the words and ideas.

It wasn't poorly written, as I have read it would be. It just wasn't that much of an exciting novel. And the only reason I pursued to finish it was because I paid full price for it (well, Amazon's price rather than used). Sawyer did show his understanding of other things, however. Many times he made allusions - even though they weren't hidden - to other tragic heroes, from Oedipus to Scrooge. And his novel did revive the questions I've had since reading/watching Watchmen and viewing the television version of Flashforward. And there are a couple: Would the futures each character see - or in some cases, didn't see - predetermined even if the flashforward hadn't happened? Or are they all compelled toward them in an attempt to avoid them? If someone - say a god figure - said that in twenty-one years you would be sitting in your car driving across the nation, while listening to and singing along with Willie Nelson's "On the Road Again," would you in fact be doing that because it was supposed to happen, or because you had no other choice?

That's pretty much the tip of the iceberg, I suppose. It's like with all philosophy - it's one question after another. And if that's what Sawyer set off to do in this physics fiction novel, then he's accomplished it. Though, I could've done without the end. Seriously. ( )
  ennuiprayer | Jan 14, 2022 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 107 (suivant | tout afficher)
Although uneven, the book was a more rewarding experience for me than the television series. If you enjoyed FlashForward on television, you should probably read the book as it delves far more deeply into many of the issues raised by its core concept.
ajouté par sdobie | modifierSF Site, Kit O'Connell (Feb 1, 2010)
 
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"He who foresees calamities suffers them twice over." --Beilby Porteus

""Free will is an illusion. It is synonymous with incomplete perception." --Walter Kubilius

"Lost time is never found again." --John H. Aughey
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For Richard M. Gotlib

Richard and I first met in high school in 1975. Back then, we each envisioned very different futures for ourselves. But one thing seemed absolutely clear: no matter how many years would pass, we'd always be friends. It's now a quarter-century later, and I'm delighted that at least that part turned out exactly as planned.
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The control building for CERN's Large Hadron Collider was new: it had been authorized in A.D. 2004 and completed in 2006.
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Fiction. Science Fiction. HTML:

Two minutes and seventeen seconds that changed the world

A scientific experiment begins, and as the button is pressed, the unexpected occurs: all seven billion people on Earth black out for more than two minutes. Millions die as planes fall from the sky, people tumble down staircases, and cars plow into each other. During that time, everyone's consciousness is catapulted more than twenty years into the future. At the end of those moments, when the world reawakens, all human life is transformed by foreknowledge.

Was that shocking revelation a peek at the real, unalterable future, or was it only one of many possible futures? What happens when a man tries to change it, like the doctor who has twenty years to try to prevent his own murder? How will the foreknowledge of a part of "then" affect the experience of the "now"?

.

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