From /tmp/sf.4258 Tue Feb 1 03:28:46 1994 Xref: liuida rec.arts.sf.reviews:379 rec.arts.books:66084 alt.books.reviews:1292 Path: liuida!sunic!pipex!uunet!psinntp!dg-rtp!sheol!dont-reply-to-paths From: Evelyn.Chimelis.Leeper@att.com Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews,rec.arts.books,alt.books.reviews Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: EINSTEIN'S DREAMS by Alan Lightman Approved: sfr%sheol@concert.net (rec.arts.sf.reviews moderator) Message-ID: <9310011916.AA00865@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com> Date: 04 Oct 93 15:27:52 GMT Lines: 33 EINSTEIN'S DREAMS by Alan Lightman A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1993 Evelyn C. Leeper Remember this novella at Hugo time. Yes, it is a novella (at about 36,000 words), but there are more ideas here than in most novels three times as long. That what EINSTEIN'S DREAMS is, in fact, about: ideas. Presented as a series of dreams dreamt by Einstein as he is formulating his theory of relativity, each chapter is a short synopsis of one view of time or one way time might be different. In one, cause may follow effect as easily as precede it; in another, time flows at different rates in different villages; in yet another, people live forever. With only about six hundred words each, Lightman conveys the feeling of what it would be like to live in such a universe. Although he is a scientist by profession, he does not focus so much on the physical effects of the various possibilities as on their effect on the emotional and psychological state of the people who inhabit those strange (and some not so strange) universes. Some are totally impossible, but others may in some sense be our own world. For those interested in science and for those interested in philosophy, this book has a lot to chew on. I *highly* recommend it. %T Einstein's Dreams %A Alan Lightman %C New York %D 1993 %I Pantheon %O hardback, US$17. %G ISBN 0-679-41646-3 %P 179pp