Flashforward

319 pages

English language

Published Feb. 23, 2000 by Tor Book.

ISBN:
978-0-8125-8034-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
57697115

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4 stars (8 reviews)

Robert J. Sawyer's award-winning science fiction has garnered both popular and critical acclaim. The New York Times Book Review called Frameshift "filled to bursting with ideas, characters and incidents". His novels are fixtures on the Hugo and Nebula ballots. Sawyer now brings us Flashforward, the story of a world-shattering discovery. In pursuit of an elusive nuclear particle, an experiment goes incredibly awry, and, for a few moments, the consciousness of the entire human race is thrown ahead by about twenty years. As the implications truly hit home, the pressure to repeat the experiment builds. Everyone wants a glimpse of their future, a chance to flashforward and see their successes ... or learn how to avoid their failures. Winner of the Aurora Award and the basis for the hit ABC television series

1 edition

What if the whole world knew its future?

5 stars

At the moment a scientific experiment begins, everyone on the planet blacks out for two minutes. For those two minutes, everyone sees through the eyes of their future selves, two decades down the line. The world is transformed: first by the millions of accidents caused as drivers, pilots and surgeons lost control of their vehicles and instruments, and second by the survivors’ knowledge of the future.

What follows is an exploration of the nature of time, destiny and free will. Is this a glimpse of the future as it will be, or as it may be? Did the experiment cause the event, or was it a coincidence? Is foreknowledge a blessing or a curse?

Flashforward is at its best when it focuses on characters’ dilemmas. The novel centers on the personal lives of researchers at CERN, particularly the two scientists who designed the experiment: Lloyd Simcoe, a 45-year-old Canadian who …

Review of 'Flashforward' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Having watched the short-lived ABC television series "based on" this book, I was curious to see how Sawyer (an author I really like) actually envisioned the topic. Thankfully, all of the soap opera and cop drama aspects of the TV series disappeared and instead what we got was a short story exploring (just a bit) the science aspects, and mostly asking this question: how would people respond if they got a brief glimpse of their future?

Flashforward is a easy entertaining read. Not as good as some of Sawyer's other stuff (the Hominids trilogy is my particular favorite), but still worth a read.

Review of 'Flashforward' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The premise is promising: All of humanity suddenly gets a glimpse of their lives, twenty years in the future.

But that's about it, really. Even though [a:Robert J. Sawyer|25883|Robert J. Sawyer|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1224975910p2/25883.jpg] asks the philosophical question and mixes it with science and some suspense, the end result is that of a big shrug. Mostly.

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Subjects

  • Science fiction
  • Time travel
  • Bosons de Higgs
  • Voyages dans le temps
  • Romans, nouvelles
  • Science-fiction
  • Fiction