Sunday, October 25

Einstein's Dreams + Anathem + Cloud Atlas

   This post continues my catchup of reviews of books I've read in the past
   few months.  These three books share the theme of time...

   1. "Einstein's Dreams" by Alan Lightman
     <http://www.amazon.com/Einsteins-Dreams/dp/140007780X>

   This book is a collection of brief "thought experiments" on the nature
   of time.  Each short chapter is presented as a (fictional) dream that
   Albert Einstein had while he was formulating the Special Theory of
   Relativity.  Some examples include: time is circular; time stands still;
   time goes backwards; time goes slower the higher up you are.  Each dream
   describes the implications of the particular concept of time on people
   and how things work.

   I was drawn to the book by the comparisons with works by Italo Calvino
   and Jorge Luis Borges.  Overall, the book doesn't really works as a
   traditional "novel", and in my opinion isn't quite in the same league as
   Calvino's work.  But it's still thought-provoking and very enjoyable.
   Don't be put off by the Einstein reference: you don't need a deep
   understanding of science to follow each "dream".


   2. "Anathem" by Neal Stephenson
     <http://www.amazon.com/Anathem/dp/006147410X>

   I really wanted to like this book.  Neal Stephenson is, er was, one of
   my favourite authors.  Lately however, he's produced long, drawn-out
   sagas that haven't really worked for me.  I spent so much time reading
   the book (it's almost 1000 pages long!) that I'll take some shortcuts
   in this review ;)

   The novel starts off interestingly enough: "Stephenson conjures a far-
   future Earth-like planet, Arbre, where scientists, philosophers and
   mathematicians — a religious order unto themselves — have been
   cloistered behind concent (convent) walls. Their role is to nurture all
   knowledge while safeguarding it from the vagaries of the irrational
   saecular outside world" (from the Amazon page).

   But after the first third of the book, the real story begins, and
   ironically I started to lose interest.  Again, from the Amazon page:
   "Anathem is intellectually rigorous and exceedingly complex, even to the
   point, as the Washington Post avows, of being 'grandiose, overwrought
   and pretty damn dull'."  Yep, that pretty much sums it up.  What really
   grated with me was that, at least in my opinion, the actual science
   presented didn't hold up.  It may be an alternative universe, so a
   little leeway is acceptable, but the more detail the author goes into
   about the physics and chemistry in the story, the more implausible it
   became.

   Decent editing could probably whittle it down to a tight 300-page novel,
   and although I still wouldn't have bought the storyline, at least I
   wouldn't have felt like I'd wasted so much time on it.


   3. "Cloud Atlas" by David Mitchell
     <http://www.amazon.com/Cloud-Atlas/dp/0375507256>

   This book has rightly been described as ambitious.  It is comprises a
   series of related stories, presented like an onion or a set of Russian
   Matryoshka dolls.  That is, each story is wrapped by and leads into
   the next one.

   The stories span six different eras, each written in a different genre:
   excerpts from the journal of a 19th Century ocean traveller, letters
   from a parasitic English musician living in Belgium in the 1930s, a
   corruption exposé/crime story set in the 1970s, a modern-day story
   about a publisher trapped against his will in a nursing home, a sci-fi
   story about genetically-engineered slaves in a corporation-run Korea,
   and finally, at the core of the book, a post-apocalyptic story about
   the meeting of a group of feral, post-"Fall" survivors with a custodian
   of lost technology.

   Apart from the physical structure of the book, the stories are connected
   by the suggestion of reincarnation.  A central character in each story
   happens to have a comet-shaped birthmark.  Also, each story looks at
   aspects of human nature, and our relationship to technology, over time.

   Overall, I found it a worthwhile read.  However, the different writing
   styles made it a little hard going at times.