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Timescape

#27 SF Masterworks

Gregory Benford

$26.99

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English
Gollancz
01 June 2000
1962:

A young Californian scientist finds his experiments spoiled by mysterious interference.

Gradually his suspicions lead him to a shattering truth:

scientists from the end of the century are using subatomic particles to send a message into the past, in the hope that history can be changed and a world-threatening catastrophe averted.

By:  
Imprint:   Gollancz
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Volume:   No. 27
Dimensions:   Height: 195mm,  Width: 130mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   298g
ISBN:   9781857989359
ISBN 10:   185798935X
Series:   S.F. Masterworks
Pages:   416
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Other merchandise
Publisher's Status:   Active

SALES POINTS * #27 in the Millennium SF Masterworks series, a library of the finest science fiction ever written. * Winner of the Nebula and John W. Campbell Awards. * 'Science fiction at its very best' Anthony Burgess * ' ... a rarity: a scientist who writes with verve and insight, not only about black holes and cosmic strings, but about human desires and fears' New York Times * 'In the rapidly shrinking world of hard SF, Benford is justa bout the best now at work' The Washington Post

Reviews for Timescape (#27 SF Masterworks)

From a poisoned and desperate 1998, a group of particle-physicists at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge are employing recent (i.e., future) discoveries about the temporal properties of tachyons to try to beam a warning back to the previous generation. Meanwhile, in sunny 1963, a young physicist named Gordon Bernstein is trying to get rid of the odd interference ruining a graduate student's experiment and causing frowns in the department at La Jolla. So, while Gordon resolves the noise into unfathomable messages about marine plankton and some sort of pesticide no one has ever heard of, the Cambridge SOS-broadcasters helplessly watch the 1998 spread of an appalling biochemical contamination from the oceans to the atmosphere. But as the light is going out for the 1998 world, the very reception of the tachyon-signal is paradoxically deflecting Gordon's 1963 world into an alternate future in which the major horrors of the years after 1963 will indeed be averted. At his best (Gordon's wrestlings with the inexplicable signal; bouts of departmental flak) Benford gives the phrase science fiction a new meaning as the art that brings science to fictional life. And for the most part his people (notably a clever and self-serving English bureaucrat) are solid enough to be cared about. True, there's too much self-conscious detail here - on British class rivalries, 1963 politics, and Gordon's Jewishness. But that flaw only slightly muffles the power of this admirable, important work from a major voice in science fiction. (Kirkus Reviews)


  • Winner of British Science Fiction Association Award for Best Novel 1981
  • Winner of British Science Fiction Association Award for Best Novel 1981 (UK)
  • Winner of British Science Fiction Association Award for Best Novel 1981.
  • Winner of John W Campbell Award 1981
  • Winner of John W Campbell Award 1981 (UK)
  • Winner of John W Campbell Award 1981.

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