This
review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained
therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to
copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions.
Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot, Librarything & Tumblr by
Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: Dark Matter
Title: Dark Matter
Series:
------
Author:
Blake Crouch
Rating:
3 of 5 Stars
Genre:
SF
Pages:
354
Format:
Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Jason Desson, a once up and coming scientist [which type, I forget. It doesn't matter to me or any normal person who reads this book. It would be like describing which handgun some hero used. It only matters to a very small segment] chose his family life with his wife and son-to-be over his career and now teaches at a local college.
He is kidnapped one night and wakes up in another world. He figures out he's in a parallel universe and with the help of one the scientists from Jason2's world, attempts to get back to “his” world. And 'his' Daniella.
After much experimenting and whining and other bs, he makes it home. Only to find that what makes the whole paralell universe thing viable is that there are over 70 other Jason who all made it back too. Our Jason thinks of a clever plan, rescues his wife and son, outsmarts all the other Jasons and uses his son to find a new world to start a new life on.
My Thoughts: |
I wanted to enjoy
this more than I did. Part of it is that everything is predicated on
an athiestic outlook, ie, there is no Supreme Being, no Supreme
Observer. Schrodinger's Cat razzle dazzle means diddly squat if there
is one all knowing, all seeing, all powerful God. Dark Matter, too.
The second issue is where is all this energy coming from to create
all these branched universes? Parallel worlds being created with
every choice we make sounds great and if you're 25 is a great idea to
bat around, but when you look at it through the lens of universal
constants, it is as pie in the sky as the moon being made of green
cheese. The third ramification is that of the soul. That is theology
and once again, it is completely bypassed and ignored. For me, that
as actually more important and the lack of thought about it pushed me out of the story.
Ok, with all of
those out of the way....
Ha, who I am
kidding.
I enjoyed this.
BUT...
Sliders. Stargate
SG1. Other tv shows I can't even remember off the top of my head. I
kept getting flashes of those while reading this. I felt like I was
re-treading an old trail.
It was fun. It was
interesting. It wasn't original though and I have to admit, from all
the rah, rah, rah I'd heard about Crouch, I was expecting something
original. Crap, maybe I'm getting old. I can handle unoriginal ideas.
I thrive on the Hero's Journey, Coming of Age stories, the Underdog
Winning against Impossible Odds, the Evil McEvilson getting his Just
Rewards [of death!]. But this was like those conversations I had
with my friend Isaac when we were in highschool, bibleschool and
shortly after. As soon as the guy in the mask showed up, I knew every
major plot point that was going to happen and that disappointed me.
This
was not a bad book by any means. I would recommend it to “New to
SF” readers, it'll blow their minds. But my mind's already been
blown by this idea, 15-20+ years ago. Timothy Zahn explored this in
his short stories. Go read his short collection Cascade
Point and Other Stories.
I just wanted to
like this more and I couldn't.
★★★☆☆
No comments:
Post a Comment