Skip to main content

Book Review: Flash Forward by Robert J. Sawyer

I first became aware of Flash Forward by Robert J. Sawyer as the ill-fated TV show of the same name, which I was enjoying immensely back in late 2009 until the first season went on hiatus for the televising of the 2010 Winter Olympic games. I  don't even recall if the remaining episodes were aired in Australia, I just heard that the show had been cancelled.

I know I didn't see all 23 episodes and I really wanted to know how it ended so when I stumbled across the novel that the series was based upon in a bargain variety store I had to buy it.

The basic premise of both the novel and the TV show is that, through some mysterious anomaly, everybody in the world blacks out at the exact same moment for 2 minutes causing thousands of injuries, accidents and deaths. If that wasn't enough, during the blackout people experience visions of their future.

Unfortunately that's all the TV series and the novel that it inspired have in common. Bearing in mind, at this point, it's been several years since I watched the series, I don't think very much of the book's story even made it into the show? From memory, I think some of the character storylines are present among many subplots that were added in for the series. The TV show focuses more on a Police investigation of the flash forward (and is the storyline I was particularly interested in knowing how it ended).

The book focusses on the first time CERN's Large Hadron Collider is switched on for its maiden experiment. Coincidentally, the entire world population blacks out for 2 minutes. From there the story centers around the scientists involved, their flash forward visions and their efforts to determine if the collider was really the cause of the global event.

It's an interesting concept, since prior to Hadron Collider being switched on, there were all kinds of possible doomsday scenarios being dreamed up when something that big and powerful was fired up.

Once I got over the realization that Robert J. Sawyer's novel wouldn't answer all my questions from the TV show, I thought it would, at least, answer the main one, what caused the Flash Forward?

Although I got an answer to my question, I'm not really sure if it's the same as the TV Show was leading to, since a number of phenomenon's that occur during the flash forward in the series aren't present in the book (such as birds falling out of the sky and some people being awake during the black out).

Despite that the book is a compelling read and tells an interesting if somewhat less layered story, rooted in plausible science fiction. The world's visions are a much further look into the future than the TV series (21 years as opposed to about 7 months of the TV show) and make the bold prediction that we'll have hover cars by 2030.

I did enjoy the book's version of the story. The main scientist characters are interesting and never get too bogged down with complex scientific speak. Much of the story revolves around each character trying to resolve their particular vision, more so than what actually caused the visions in the first place. It's the kind of science fiction novel that's accessible to people not really into the science part of science fiction.

It won't really answer any questions you have of the TV series but as a novel, it's a good read. Not too difficult, and keeps you engaged virtually every step of the way.


Comments

  1. I don't remember the TV show, but I used to like Sci-Fi films back in the 50s and 60s, especially the ones that are now known as the 'old ones' most in black and white. A lot of them were quite good, and scary with the aliens from 'Outer Space' looking really weird and scary! The special effects were good for the day.

    I was only early teens when I saw most of them, as school girls used to dress up to look older to get into the cinema for the age group, sometimes 16yrs, but I only just passed muster, as I didn't even look my age, never mind older!

    I've grown away from them now, and have never seen a Star Wars movie or the like. I can still enjoy 'Village Of The Damned' the original, and the remake I bought on DVD with modern special effects and a bit more gory but it was quite good. Don't know if I could settle into a book of sci-fi, but this has more of a story, so might.

    I don't think I could read a Harry Potter book, though I know many adults have, but I might have enjoyed the films if they'd been out when you were all younger. I do like Daniel Radcliffe both young and older.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Comments are moderated by an actual human (me, TET) and may not publish right away. I do read all comments and only reject those not directly related to the post or are spam/scams (I'm looking at you Illuminati recruiters... I mean scammers. Stop commenting on my Illuminati post!).

Buy Whimsical Cat Art Prints by TET (Redbubble Store)

Enjoy Your Favorite TET Art Up Close, Interactive, and so Relaxing!

Enjoy Your Favorite TET Art Up Close, Interactive, and so Relaxing!
Relax and Challenge Yourself with a Fun, Whimsical Cat Art Jigsaw - 30-1000 pieces. Click Image for More.

Popular posts from this blog

What a Future with Flying Cars Might Look Like

Jetsons Style Flying Car - Image by TET & Leonardo.ai Regular readers of this blog will know that flying cars have been a recurring subject over the years. I even collected all my posts into a book you can buy on Amazon Kindle called Where's My Flying Car? The development of a true flying car is a fanciful one, largely because we've yet to come up with anything that actually looks like a car that flies.  Most serious projects that even make it to a prototype are either small planes that compact into something you might drive from your home to an airport (if they don't have any vertical landing and take off (VTOL) capability) but you wouldn't drive to you local supermarket for the weekly groceries run, or they're some kind of drone/helicopter configuration with so many propellers you'll worry about shredding pedestrians who get too close. The dream is something that looks exactly like a car but can drive on a road, or hover (kind of like Luke Skywalker's ...

Review: ArtHelper - The All-In-One AI Writing + Marketing Assistant for Artists - 'ChatGPT for Artists'

ArtHelper prides itself on being all 'human-made' art. T he idea of an AI, trained specifically on art business marketing, that can not only offer advice on marketing your work, but also assist with creating all the content too, is certainly appealing. Especially to those of us who would rather spend more time creating our art than trying to sell it. ArtHelper does just that whilst attempting to be your 'home' on the internet. A destination for your profile and portfolio, a marketplace for your art, and a directory of artists as well, with one distinction - all the art must be human made. Which, for you AI artists, doesn't count the prompt for AI generated art - because the idea, according to ArtHelper's creators, isn't the art. Which is a fair point, in terms of promoting art 'made by a human', but can get kind of murky when you understand that not all AI art is generated from a single prompt... and 'found object art' isn't actually ...

New Cat Art Collaboration: TET's Cats Paintings and OpenArt AI Model Workspace (Photobooth)

TET's Cats AI generated art trained on my own art style. Way back in the early 2000's I started painting stylized cat artworks to illustrate some cat themed poems I'd written, that I exhibited and sold online in an exhibition titled 'Sleeping Cats' in 2004. You can see all these early works in my Flickr Album . Many are also available to buy as prints in my RedBubble Store . Leading on from that I began selling my paintings on ebay where the cat themed works were almost guaranteed to sell over any other subject I painted. As a result I became some what known for my cat art to the point where people would commission me to create images of their own pet cats in my cartoony style. Flash forward a decade (almost two at this point) and I haven't painted any cat themed art in years. To be honest I haven't done any traditional painting at all in years. In the last couple of years AI image generators have really caught my attention. Specifically that they are able t...

Is AI Art 'Art'? The Say NO to AI Art Movement, and Why Human Artists Will Adapt

AI Art No T-Shirt by TET Also available on other items . Right now there is a big debate over not just whether AI art is 'art' but whether AI's are actually ripping off the work of actual human artists, without their consent, to create their images - particularly images 'in the style of' specific artists. From my own observations this debate started to get more traction when artist's signatures began appearing in the output of AI Art  image generators. Is It Art? Cool Froyd the Cat Sketch by TET. My style is very much influenced by classic Disney and WB character styles. To get some clarity on how real human artists work (of which I am one)... we, that is all of us... take influences from the art that has come before. i.e. whatever artists we like, have studied, seen etc. we are influenced by. It shows up in our work, intentionally or not. If you really study my own cartoony art style you'll see I'm heavily influenced by early Disney and Warner Bros cart...

TET Artwork Diary: Cats, Goats, and Battlestar Galactica's Cylon, Number Six

Y ou wouldn't know it from this blog, where I reference it a handful of posts , but I am a big fan of the rebooted 2003  Battlestar Galactica Series . Which is how I come to be Facebook following the series most recognised Cylon, Six - well the actress who plays six anyway, Tricia Helfer . One thing you'll learn pretty quickly about Tricia is that she owns a lot of rescue cats - and that she's more at home being a farm/country girl, surrounding herself with animals than she is living in cities - though she definitely seems to drift between the two worlds with ease. Cats and Goats Tricia with Larry and Earl. Still from Tricia Helfer's FB Video . However, this is a blog post about a cat and goats, specifically Trica's Goats, Larry and Earl, that currently live at the Farm of the Free . She posted a video of herself visiting them on her Facebook . Click the link for the full video. Cat at Farm of the Free with Tricia, Larry, & Earl. Still from Tricia Helfer's F...

How to Transfer Any Line Art to Your Griptape - Easy Skateboard Griptape Art Tutorial

Dog Star Griptape Art by TET Griptape art is once again gaining popularity amongst modern skateboarders. For those of us who have tried to create our own griptape art, using paint pens, you'll know reproducing your design onto the grip, without making any mistakes is incredibly challenging. Mostly because you just have to go for it and draw the design freehand, with paint pens, directly onto the griptape. You can make the odd mistake here or there but if you get the proportions of the design completely wrong, it can be very difficult to fix. Often you just have to live with the mistake. To address the problem I've come up with an easy way anyone can transfer a line art design to their griptape, removing almost all the anxiety of getting the proportions wrong. In fact, you could do this with any line art design, even if you have no drawing skill at all. Watch the video below to see my technique in action and/or skip past the video where I highlight the basic steps to get your de...

Two night Stay Glenelg, South Australia - Glenelg Motel, Beach Front, Cafe Strip/Jetty Road, and Evening Temptation Twilight Cruise

The Glenelg Giant Wheel. T he Glenelg foreshore and Cafe/Shopping strip (Jetty Road) at the end of the tramline from Adelaide, South Australia is arguably one of the must visit tourist regions of the city. It particularly has a lot to offer families with, not just the beach, but quite a number of playgrounds and grassed reserves as well. My partner booked us a post weekend, two night (Sunday and Monday), getaway in Glenelg by way of some discount vouchers she secured as part of a promotion encouraging people to visit the region over the Summer. Glenelg Motel The recently refurbished rooms of the Glenelg Motel raise your expectations from what the exterior of the rooms themselves suggest, which is a very 1970's vibe of your standard motel with parking right outside your front door (and not much else). Our room was spacious, and the modern furnishings were easily to the standards of any hotel we've stayed in over the last few years. The rooms look very modern with everything you...