Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Believable Humans; Unbelievable Aliens -- Review of Robert J. Sawyer's "Rollback"

NEW SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY REVIEWS
Reviews Of Recently Published Science Fiction And Fantasy Books
Reviewer: Forrest Schultz schultz_forrest@yahoo.com 770-583-3258
December 23, 2014
Believable Humans; Unbelievable Aliens
A Review of
Robert J. Sawyer "Rollback" (Tor, 2007)
                 327pp   $12.99   ISBN: 978-765-31108-5
Reviewer: Forrest Schultz
      After reading this book it is easy to understand why its author has won so many science fiction writing awards. It deftly combines two of the most interesting SF themes: SETI and biological rejuvenation, which is the process indicated by its title. The attempted rollback of the elderly couple who are the main characters of the story is only partially successful -- the process is unable to rejuvenate the wife, who is the top SETI scientist. (The psychological impact of this upon the couple immediately reminded me of a similar situation in an old Twilight Zone episode.) The result sets the stage for a great tale well thought out and well written. The SETI facet of the story, however, is only partially successful: the communications sent by the aliens are believable but NOT their biology: we have to suspend our disbelief; and Sawyer, as a great novelist, enables us to do so. This confirms what Asimov said a very long time ago about the impossibibility of creating a believable alien, which is why he never had aliens in his stories. Sawyer chose the tougher way -- writing so well that the reader forgets their unbelievability and gets enthralled in the story. I wish to thank Sherry Thompson for recommending Sawyer to me. As C. S. Lewis said, one of the greatest things someone can teach you is recommending which authors to read.

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

How To Conduct Scientific Research in Plain Sight --- A Review of the SF Element in Stephen King's "Revival"

NEW SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY REVIEWS
Reviews Of Recently Published Science Fiction And Fantasy Books
Reviewer: Forrest Schultz schultz_forrest@yahoo.com 770-583-3258

December 16, 2014
How To Conduct Clandestine Scientific Research In Plain Sight
A Review of the Science Fiction Element in
Stephen King Revival (Scribner, 2014)
                       $17.04     405 pp     ISBN: 978-1476770383
Reviewer:  Forrest W. Schultz    

      Stephen King's Revival is a horror novel with an important science fiction element involving a man who is able to keep his electricity research secret by conducting it under the guise of a faith healing ministry: the sick are not being healed by the Holy Ghost, but by a hidden electrical gizmo he devised for that purpose. No one suspects anything because this man is not a scientist or a medical doctor, but a former Methodist pastor. Although King lets the reader in on this secret, he does not tell us anything about the scientific basis underlying the character's gizmo: the only thing he notes about the source of his character's ideas is several arcane books from the remote past, which sound more like mysticism than science! And, indeed, the horror atmosphere of the story is not akin to science fiction, as usually considered, but to stories like those of H. P. Lovecraft. My purpose in this review is only to note what I have just mentioned about the science fiction element, so I shall not say anything more about King's book except to say that it is one of his best.