Blind Lake 121
Blind Lake | |
author | Robert Charles Wilson |
pages | 399 |
publisher | Tor |
rating | 8/10 |
reviewer | Tom Alaerts |
ISBN | 0765302624 |
summary | A book about alien contact and the difficulty of interpretation |
Blind Lake takes place in a close future and deals with alien contact and the difficulty of interpreting alien behavior. If you don't want to read further (but I will not include real spoilers, only the setting of the book), I can already summarize as follows: if you liked The Chronoliths or Darwinia, then you will like Blind Lake.
In the book, Blind Lake is one of two locations with an ultra-advanced telescope. This device doesn't work optically, and in fact nobody really understands exactly how it works (there is some amusing technobabble in the book about infinite complexity, adaptive self-programming and the like -- you know the drill), since it was invented accidentally. Anyway the result is that with this telescope, scientists can examine the surface of very far planets in great detail, they can even track an intelligent alien being through its daily life. The book follows Marguerite, a team leader at Blind Lake, her ex-husband, her young daughter (who suffers from a mild personality disorder), and a team of journalists. Marguerite leads a team of "interpreters," which leads to plenty of interesting discussions on how difficult this work is -- it is almost impossible to write the life story of the alien, since we tend to map what we observe to our own habits. Is the alien admiring the view or is he enjoying the air pressure? Etc, etc. Already from the very start of the story, Wilson injects a thriller element: Blind Lake goes into quarantine, with robot drones guarding the perimeter. Nobody knows why. Did something happen with the other telescope? Why are all data streams blocked?
Blind Lake is written with the same attention to detail as The Chronoliths, and the characters are equally well developed. There isn't much adventurous action in the book; it is built rather like a mystery novel with thriller elements, interjected with several interesting ideas. The pacing is similar to that of The Chronoliths. Wilson takes time to flesh out his characters and various background details. I like this thoughtful approach. Towards the end, various new ideas are introduced which are bigger in scope than the original storyline.
While I liked the almost metaphysical (even somewhat new age) concepts introduced in the later chapters, I actually preferred the original storyline (I had the same feeling with Darwinia, which evolves from an alternative history novel into a totally different story). Still, this is only a minor issue and most SF readers will experience a great deal of satisfaction with this book.
I would score Blind Lake 8/10. As a comparison with other Wilson books: I think it's as good as The Chronoliths, while I would rate Darwinia as a 7/10.
Interesting links
- Author's homepage
- Interesting reviews of Wilson's books
- The Blind Lake page at Barnes&Noble has interesting other comments (maybe even already a bit too much info if you haven't read the book yet).
You can purchase Blind Lake from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
deliberate pacing? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:deliberate pacing? (Score:2, Funny)
This would be better:
I really liked the deliberate pacing of the book (I can understand that some might find it slow), following the characters through a carefully constructed story.
Slow? It makes Ayn Rand novels look like a choose your own adventure.
Re:deliberate pacing? (Score:1)
'Nuff said.
Re:deliberate pacing? (Score:1)
Voyeurism (Score:2)
Anyway the result is that with this telescope, scientists can examine the surface of very far planets in great detail, they can even track an intelligent alien being through its daily life.
Sounds like the ultimate unreality show.
Re:Voyeurism (Score:1)
Sounds like a Southpark episode...
I have always wondered... (Score:5, Interesting)
That is travel faster than light, to a long distance, turn around and then look at earth with a powerful telescope, we should be able to see kennedy getting shot? wouldnt we? Or maybe bend spacetime so that all the light which left earth years ago comes back to earth ?
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
You'd need a telescope with a mirror several light-years across the see the Kennedy assassination now. (Even if you could travel faster than light, which you can't.) Constructing such a thing is problematic, to say the least.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2, Interesting)
Given that the poster already is postulating travel at v > c, is it not unreasonable to also assume a telescope based on a design other than our lens- or mirror-based technology? For example, he/she might use some sort of gravitational lensing technology to focus the collected light.
Also, c as a cosmological speed limit has come into a share of contraversy from what I've been reading lately. Granted,
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Sooo... What we've got is light that travels faster than light?
Dont mind me, Im tired and I couldnt help it
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Exactly! And that's not the weirdest part. The experiment involved shooting a pulse of light through a gas that accelerated it. The result was that the pulse appeared to exit the gas chamber before it entered it!
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Sure it does, if you assume the universe is infinate, eventually it's going to be blocked by a planet or moon or asteroid or nebula or sucked into a black hole or some kind of magical space jibber jabber.
Space is only mostly empty.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Why would you assume it's infinite, though? Most of the scientific community at this point agrees it's finite but unbounded, don't they?
The advantage of that theory is that it gives me an equally valid claim on the being the center of the universe as anyplace else.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Frankly my dear, I don't give a damn.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
And, since there is not infinite mass, there may be some paths that never intersect an object. Since the universe is expanding, there are more of them over time, not less.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:3, Funny)
"I ain't gettin' on no space shuttle, fool!"
Grab.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:3, Funny)
JESUS CHRIST We've finally done it! A slashdotter from an alternate dimention has managed to cross-post here! Oh wait...
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Let's try 1953
silly proofreaders.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Ever heard of a scientist named Einstein? He wrote of a very important theory: Relativity.
And one of the major points of this theory is that the speed of light is an absolute. You cannot go faster. You can't even REACH light-speed if you have any mass, because that would require an infinite amount of energy.
There are other things that might allow you to get there before the light. A wormhole, being a "hole" in space-time joins two places so they are very close through the
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Look up what a theory is. Its not a law. Just the best guess based on current observations. It doesn't meant that it its really is impossible to move faster than light, its just what we think now.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Which means we have to assume that it's valid. Just like I know the Sun may not come up tomorrow morning, since my belief is just based on induction, but to actually fear it might not come up, or to argue a point based on that possibility, is just childish and not very contructive. I know relativity might be wrong. I'm just putting that aside
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:3, Insightful)
Its a wild and wacky world out there. [wolfram.com]
rather than trying to build arguments on some superstition or some science-fiction belief.
All scientific theories were once wacky out-there beliefs. Instead of saying "What are you an idiot thinking you can break some well accepted theory! Conform, damn you!", perhaps you should explain why they are wrong.
Everthing is a theory until is proven wrong.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
To those who didn't understand them, maybe, but to other scientists they're not. There's a difference between "wacky" and "widely disbelieved".
I'm not saying I'm not ready to believe a different t
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
So therefore we should reject it? "Its too crazy therefore its wrong"? Is that your scientific reasoning?
>and the fact that their existence would violate special relativity tells me that they most likely do not exist, instead of believing that special relativity can't be true because tachyons might exist.
So you accept one theory over another because you favour it? A personnal preference? Are you arbitarily chosing to ignore a theory, just l
Re:Lorentzian Relativity (Score:1)
One of the alternate theories to General Relativity is Lorentzian Relativity [geocities.com]. It doesn't require (or indeed, perhaps, allow) time to run backwards, or time to stop, which also doesn't leave us in the lurch the same way trying to imagine what a 0 or -n result from General Relativity means.
Tom Van Flandern [metaresearch.org] uses it to postulate FTL behavior of gravity and electromagnetic effects. Electromagnetic effects include the deflection of particles based on the other particle's "actual location" (as would be based on a
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
(radius of Earth * 2) / (40 light years) = 3.37090051 x 10-11 [google.com]
This is the arc in the sky from a disc with Earth's diameter from 40 light years. Roughly this is the fraction of the original ene
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
If the impact of photons were infinitely divisible then we could just read the disturbances in the waves as they continue to propogate here on earth, no reason to travel anywhere.
Just try figuring out the aperture on a camera located 50 light years away. You'll need a small opening in order to filter out the rest of the universe's light.
Alternately you could put your camera in Utah, which is roughly 40 years behind the rest of the US.
A way around the FTL limitation (Score:2)
Slow? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Slow? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Slow? (Score:2)
Four legs are better than two!
Re:Slow? (Score:2, Informative)
The Victorian Era did *NOT* product the slowest novels of all time.
Sincerely,
Marcel Proust
Re:Slow? (Score:1)
Sounds exciting (Score:1)
Darwinia is quite good . . . (Score:2)
Re:Darwinia is quite good . . . (Score:2)
I enjoyed the first half of Darwinia, but the second half made me hate it.
Never never never again... (Score:3, Insightful)
As an entertainment form, I value reading higher (WAY higher) than movies and television. Combine that with a fickle disposition for genre and style and the result is that there are too few fiction books that will satisfy me. The last thing I need is some amateur wack job disclosing the whole plot in a "review" and ruining the book entirely.
IMHO, the "review" that I am referring to should have been removed faster than a goatse link on the main page labeled "microsoft goes bankrupt."
Thanks for the reviews guys, but fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice and I'll have to murder you and your whole family with a pack of silly straws and a cantaloupe.
Re:Never never never again... (Score:1, Interesting)
Rest assured, your frustration is unfounded. When it comes to plot details, I basically presented what you can read on the first few pages and on the dustjacket, plus only a few of the many ideas in the book.
I think it would be very difficult to write a meaningful review if you can't mention anything at all about the story.
best regards, Tom
Re:Never never never again... (Score:2)
Unfortunately, I did not preview after editing.
The link is here now: Decipher review [slashdot.org]
I have not read your review (nor will I read a reveiw on
In addition I would like to commend you on your integrity. Your reply to my post was controlled, intelligent, and non-confrontational considering what was
The book flaps contain MORE spoilers! (Score:1, Informative)
The reviewer could maybe just have said "Blind Lake takes place in a close future and deals with alien contact and the difficulty of interpreting alien behavior", but would that be enough to form an opinion?
In short, maybe you're overreacting a little...
Re:Never never never again... (Score:1)
If The Chronoliths was an example of Ro
Re:Never never never again... (Score:1)
I did pick up one good tip on
Give it a rest (Score:2)
I looked at your other /. contributions an this silly rant is, at 2, one point higher that every other comment you posted.
Maybe the "review" was just to bring a special author to the attention of a bigger crowd. I personally enjoy reviews as I get pointers among the higher ranked comments to authors that I might like.
The Sparrow (Score:4, Informative)
That may sound odd, but this is an exceptionally fine book with well-developed characters and a compeling story. Russell is an anthropologist by training and her understanding of what it means to encounter a truly alien society and the consequences of that are profound and impactful.
Highly recommended if the wider implications of Blind Lake appeal to you, or you enjoy thought-provoking literature.
Re:The Sparrow (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Sparrow (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Sparrow (Score:2)
I
Re:The Sparrow (Score:2)
I had read that and had high hopes for the book, but personally, I found it quite disappointing. While it does some a couple of good characters and the seeds of some very interesting ideas, about 2/3 of the book is spent not on the alien society, but on the process of choosing the crew (rather unbelievable), who's pining after who on bo
Re:The Sparrow (Score:1)
Re:The Sparrow (Score:1)
Except in reverse, I guess.
i didn't know geeks read books like this (Score:1, Funny)
Darwinia (Score:2)
I read Darwinia last week, and I think the reviewer here is underrating it. Then again, I also thought that the giant midbook twist (which he complains about above, and which I won't spoil here) was possibly the best part.
Re:Darwinia (Score:2)
Oh, I am by no means seeking to criticise his enjoyment or lack thereof. Nor am I in any way claiming that he misrepresented his own subjective opinion of the book.
I am, however, giving his opinion on the book a 5 out of 10.
Re:Old Plot (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Old Plot (Score:2)
Re:Already been done? (Score:2)
One probably difference, although I like Piers Anthony and have read quite a bit of his stuff, character development is not what you'd call one of his strong points. This review leading me to believe the opossite is true in Blind Lake.
So, I wait anxiously for the response to your question from someone who has read both.
Cheers
D.
tag error (Score:2, Informative)
In the source for the end of the article:
I would score Blind Lake 8/10. As a comparison with other Wilson books: I think it's as good as The Chronoliths, while I would rate Darwinia as a 7/10.
<cite>Darwinia<cite>
should be changed to:
<cite>Darwinia</cite>
Specifically the cite tag needs to be closed properly. The way the article is now, all of the text after the article (including the comments) is italicized.
Sounds like Macroscope... (Score:1)
Re:Sounds like Macroscope... (Score:1)
Skyshadow's Late Summer Reading List (Score:1, Offtopic)
On reflection, I've spent most of the summer reading nonfiction for a change...
Jarhead by Anthony Swofford
Swofford was a Marine sniper during Gulf War I, and this book talks about that experience and his experience in the Corps. It's an e
Idea for the Dashboard guys: (Score:2)
NOT a "minor issue". (Score:2, Informative)
Wilson's books seem to focus on the main characters' ordinary lives, even in the face of something really interesting happening, *somewhere else*. You keep hoping that we'll get to see the interesting things, but that never happens.
Not sure... (Score:2)
More Information [66.199.135.127]
Re:Why (Score:1)
Maybe you have your system fonts set ridiculously huge? Or maybe you're talking out of your ass--like EVERY OTHER COMMENT YOU MAKE. =P
Advertisebot? -- Re:save $2.50 on this book (Score:2, Interesting)
Note to moderators -- pleez do not moderate this kind of thing up. We are all smart enough to shop around if we want to save money and it just encourages them...
Re:Advertisebot? -- Re:save $2.50 on this book (Score:1)
Read the reviews at amazon, shop at buy.com!
Re:save $2.50 on this book (Score:5, Informative)
Re:save $2.50 on this book (Score:2)
Both AddAll [addall.com] and Froogle [google.com] show it at Overstock.com for $5 less than Amazon, with the advantages that they don't give referrer fees to anonymous trolls or support obnoxious patents [google.com].
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Yeah, I thought so.