Scan barcode
viviannehunt's review
4.0
Really interesting book about quantum realities. The main character was really likable, and the romantic subplot was enjoyable. Honestly, it was a really good book. A bit too much philosophizing and going on about quantum physics, but I loved the character development and action scenes.
alenaysu's review against another edition
5.0
Wow! This may be my favorite read of 2023!
Such a great thought-provoking book. I wish I could read more works like this one!
I didn’t struggle with the physics part in this book since I’m familiar with quantum physics but I can imagine that someone who doesn’t have much knowledge on this topic could feel a bit lost at some points.
However, I do have a critique point.
Why was Caro such an annoying and selfish character?
Every time she opened her mouth, it was only to nag about something. Her constant disbelief in this whole project, even though she got the physics behind it explained over and oveeeer again, was also annoying af.
The way she had been stubbornly against implanting Watkins but when it was for her own selfish reasons she didn’t accept a no to get implanted herself?
Also, why did she have the constant need to make everything about herself? Any time a catastrophe happened, her first thought was “omg was it because of meeee?” -No caro, you don’t rule the whole world :)
And why did she fell in love or get attracted to every male character she encountered?
I could get on and on about how annoying caro was but to make it short: I very much would have enjoyed this book more without Caro being so negative towards the whole project
riverlethe's review against another edition
1.0
DNF @ 29%. Wooden characters, shoehorned interactions which appeared to be written by people who have never encountered other humans outside of fan fiction, and manufactured urgency which never translated. This book had such an interesting premise and was recommended by other scifi authors so I was very disappointed.
lacers526's review
4.5
So good! I loved the characters in here. Each had their own distinct voice and full personality. I could picture this playing out in real life. The science bogged me down a bit, but not enough to totally ruin my enjoyment, but enough that I did have to take breaks and it took me quite a while to read. The concept was quite interesting though. It’s definitely a new take on a concept that I’ve read about before. It’s a book that actually took the time to explain to me HOW it was supposed to work. Did I grasp it all? Probably not. Did it matter? Nope.
I want these characters back in my life! That’s where this book really shines. The motivations, the conflict, the respect, the cooperation, the family, the grief, and the joy. It’s all there in such a way that you feel it too.
The plot had some moments that I certainly didn’t see coming. Overall, this was really great! I highly recommend!
I won this book in a Goodreads Giveaway, with no expectation of a review.
I want these characters back in my life! That’s where this book really shines. The motivations, the conflict, the respect, the cooperation, the family, the grief, and the joy. It’s all there in such a way that you feel it too.
The plot had some moments that I certainly didn’t see coming. Overall, this was really great! I highly recommend!
I won this book in a Goodreads Giveaway, with no expectation of a review.
rbharath's review against another edition
adventurous
informative
reflective
relaxing
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.0
This book caught my attention as an interesting collaborative effort between a scientist (Robert Lanza) and a science fiction writer (Nancy Kress). The content is extremely thought provoking, packaged in a easy-to-read story.
Caroline (Caro) Soames-Watkins is constrained to leave the hospital she works in as a neurosurgeon. She had accused Dr Paul Becker, Chief of Neurosurgery of sexual harassment but her claim is dismissed for want of corroboration and evidence. Caro is close to her sister Ellen and her daughters Kayla and Angelica. While her sister has problems of her own, she offers Caro her moral support. Her great uncle Sam Watkins makes Caro a job offer for a research project a group is running in Cayman Islands. Sam Watkins is very ill and is keen for Caro to join at the earliest. Caro reluctantly agrees though she is very sceptical about the project initially as it comes across as far-fetched to her. The research combines physics concepts (including the multiverse, quantum entanglement, time theories and others) with neuroscience. The underlying premise for the research is that matter is created when observed by consciousness, else it exists as quantum foam. The research team claims remarkable advances using this to change human understanding and lives. There are others on the project including Weigert, Julian and another neurosurgeon Trevor who joins after her.
This book introduces some brave ideas, all rooted in good science. By virtue of having a scientist as one of the authors, the science gets far more prominence than usual in science fiction books. But it is done carefully – in an easy-to-understand conversational format. The book does draw to some extent on experiences mystics report and is also prominent in Vedanta, referred to in passing in the book (in Vedanta ‘Brahman’ is the permanent originator & unifier which also manifests as us & what we see). The quotes below are illustrative.
“
She lay—at six years old? Seven?—on a blanket in the back garden, watching clouds drift across the sky. Then, all at once, the clouds were no longer there, and neither was Caro. She was nowhere and everywhere, woven into what she later thought of as “the fabric of the universe.” She was the clouds, the grass, the breeze, the ant crawling across her arm. Everything was her, and she was everything.
“
“
He’d imagined a world where, as people began to see the truth of a consciousness-centered universe, they would come to understand that other people, too, were intimately connected to them. They would then become kinder to each other. All men would truly become brothers because they were all sharers in the consciousness that shaped the world.
“
Sadly, the writing is not great, reducing what could have been a blockbuster science fiction book to something much lesser. Yet, this book has concepts and perspectives which are intellectually very stimulating, and for that – I definitely recommend it.
eowens's review
5.0
I pre-ordered this book almost 9 months before its release because I was sooooo excited about it, and it did not disappoint. Some of the quantum physics made my head hurt, but I enjoyed the concept and the characters. In some ways, I enjoyed "Observer" similarly to "Dark Matter" and "Recursion," both by Blake Crouch (and both of which I looooooved), but Observer didn't feel quite as dark.
frithnanth's review against another edition
adventurous
emotional
informative
inspiring
tense
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.0
aolshefke's review
hopeful
mysterious
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
2.5