Sunday, November 1, 2009

Rollback gets a FlashForward boost


It's always nice when a novel goes into a new printing. My most-recent mass-market paperback is the Hugo Award-nominated Rollback (which had a very successful run in hardcover prior to that). Tor Books has gone back to press for another printing -- which gave them the chance to mention that I'm also the author of FlashForward, the novel behind the ABC TV series of the same name.

More about Rollback.
"Above all, the author's characters bear their human strengths and weaknesses with dignity and poise. An elegantly told story for all libraries; highly recommended." --Library Journal (starred review, denoting a work of exceptional merit)

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Saturday, October 31, 2009

And where do the main characters on FlashForward live? Why, on Sawyer Court, of course!


This week's episode of FlashForward, the ABC TV series based on my novel of the same name, not only added a whole lot of physics to the show but also revealed where Mark Benford and Dr. Olivia Benford live: at 25696 Sawyer Court. We see the above address label in the flashforward vision of Dylan Simcoe, son of Lloyd Simcoe, in episode 6, "Scary Monsters and Super Creeps," and the street name is spoken repeatedly in dialog.

Cool! Almost as cool, in fact, as my cameo in the first episode, "No More Good Days" (below).


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Friday, October 30, 2009

David S. Goyer discusses Robert J. Sawyer's upcoming FlashForward script


David S. Goyer, executive producer and showrunner of FlashForward, the ABC TV series based on my novel of the same name, discusses (among other things) my involvement with the series and the episode that I'll be writing (episode 17) in this 1 minute 46 second YouTube interview.

For a larger picture or HD version, go here.
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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Jessika Borsiczky on adapting my novel


A nice video interview with Jessika Borsiczky, executive producer of FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel. (Jessika's last name is pronounced Bor-shees-key.)

Tune in tonight for episode 5, "Gimme Some Truth." I was on the set for much of the filming of this one, and enjoyed having lunch with guest star Glynn Turman. (I'll be watching it in a hotel room in Winnipeg.)
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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Flashing back to FlashForward


In honor of the release of the new tie-in editions of my 1999 novel FlashForward, which is the basis for the hit ABC TV series, I wrote a little essay about the book for Tor.com. Here it is.
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Monday, October 19, 2009

#2 Bestseller storewide at Play.com!

Holy crap! My novel FlashForward -- basis for the hit TV series -- is currently the #2 bestselling book store-wide at Play.com, the UK's second-largest online retailer. Here's the list:



Congratulations to Simon Spanton and the team at Gollancz, my British publisher, for getting the book out there with such success.
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Monday, October 12, 2009

#22 storewide at Amazon.co.uk


The UK edition of the FlashForward novel by Robert J. Sawyer hit #22 storewide at Amazon.co.uk today; has moved up to #5 in genre; and is holding strong at #1 in science fiction.

(And the book has now spent nine days in the top 100 at Amazon.co.uk -- yay!)

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FlashForward picked up for full season


ABC today announced that it has renewed FlashForward, the TV series based on the novel of the same name by Robert J. Sawyer, for a full season. On top of the initial order of 13 episodes, another 11 will be produced this season, for a first-season total of 24. The ABC press release is here.

Yahoo!
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Friday, October 9, 2009

From book to screen

Lots of people have commented on the ways in which the TV series FlashForward has deviated from my novel of the same name upon which it is based. And, indeed, in some ways it has, but, to me, it's still very much my story, and I'm pleased with the adaptation.

For instance, last night (in North America), the third episode, "137 Sekunden," aired, and it has a scene in which John Cho's character receives a call from a woman with unsettling news; that scene clearly traces its roots to this scene from Chapter 5 of the FlashForward novel:
Theo returned to his office, the darkness of night visible through his window. All this talk of visions was disturbing — especially since he himself hadn't had one. Could Lloyd be right? Could Theo be dead a mere twenty-one years from now? He was only twenty-seven, for God's sake; in two decades, he'd still be well shy of fifty. He didn't smoke — not much of a statement for any of the North Americans to make, but still an achievement among Greeks. He worked out regularly. Why on earth should he be dead so soon? There had to be another explanation for him having no vision.

His phone bleeped. Theo picked up the handset. "Hello?"

"Hello," said a female voice, in English. "Is this, ah, Theodosios Procopides?" She stumbled over the name.

"Yes."

"My name is Kathleen DeVries," said the woman. "I've been mulling over whether to phone you. I'm calling from Johannesburg."

"Johannesburg? You mean in South Africa?"

"For the time being, anyway," she said. "If the visions are to be believed, it's going to be officially renamed Azania sometime in the next twenty-one years."

Theo waited silently for her to go on. After a moment, she did. "And it's the visions that I'm calling about. You see, mine involved you."

Theo felt his heart racing. What wonderful news! Maybe he hadn't had a vision of his own for whatever reason, but this woman had seen him twenty-one years hence. Of course he had to be alive then; of course, Lloyd was wrong when he said Theo would be dead.

"Yes?" Theo said breathlessly.

"Umm, I'm sorry to have bothered you," said DeVries. "Can I — may I ask what your own vision showed?"

Theo let out air. "I didn't have one," he said.

"Oh. Oh, I am sorry to hear that. But — well, then, I guess it wasn't a mistake."

"What wasn't a mistake?"

"My own vision. I was here, in my home, in Johannesburg, reading the newspaper over dinner — except it wasn't on newsprint. It was on this thing that looked like a flat plastic sheet; some sort of computerized reader screen, I think. Anyway, the article I was reading happened to be — well, I'm sorry there's no other way to say it. It was about your death."

Theo had once read a Lord Dunsany story about a man who fervently wished to see tomorrow's newspaper today, and when he finally got his wish, was stunned to discover it contained his own obituary. The shock of seeing that was enough to kill him, news which would of course be reported in the next day's edition. That was it; that was all — a zinger, a punch line. But this ... this wasn't tomorrow's paper; it was a paper two decades hence.

"My death," repeated Theo, as though those two words had somehow been missed in his English classes.

"Yes, that's right."

Theo rallied a bit. "Look, how do I know this isn't some scam or prank?"

"I'm sorry; I knew I shouldn't have called. I'll be —"

"No, no, no. Don't hang up. In fact, please let me get your name and number. The damned call display is just showing `Out of Area.' You should let me phone you back; this call must be costing you a fortune."

"My name, as I said, is Kathleen DeVries. I'm a nurse at a senior citizens' home here." She told him her phone number. "But, really, I'm glad to pay for the call. Honestly, I don't want anything from you, and I'm not trying to trick you. But, well — look, I see people die all the time. We lose about one a week here at the home, but they're mostly in their eighties or nineties or even their hundreds. But you — you're going to be just forty-eight when you die, and that's way too young. I thought by calling you up, by letting you know, maybe you could somehow prevent your own death."

Theo was quiet for several seconds, then, "So, does the — the obituary say what I died of?" For one bizarre moment, Theo was kind of pleased that his passing had been worthy of note in international newspapers. He almost asked if the first two words in the article happened to be "Nobel laureate." "I know I should cut down on my cholesterol; was it a heart attack?"

There was silence for several seconds. "Umm, Dr. Procopides, I'm sorry, I guess I should have been more clear. It's not an obituary I was reading; it's a news story." He could hear her swallow. "A news story about your murder."

Theo fell silent. He could have repeated the word back to her incredulously. But there was no point.

He was twenty-seven; he was in good health. As he'd been thinking a few moments ago, of course he wouldn't be dead of natural causes in a mere twenty-one years. But — murder?

"Dr. Procopides? Are you still there?"

"Yes." For the time being.

"I'm — I'm sorry, Dr. Procopides. I know this must come as quite a shock."

Theo was quiet for a few moments longer, then: "The article you were reading — does it say who kills me?"

"I'm afraid not. It's an unsolved crime, apparently."

"Well, what does the article say?"

"I've written down as much of it as I remember; I can E-mail you it, but, well, here, let me read it to you. Remember, this is a reconstruction; I think it's pretty accurate, but I can't guarantee every word." She paused, cleared her throat, then went on. "The headline was, `Physicist Shot Dead.'"

Shot, thought Theo. God.

DeVries went on. "The dateline was Geneva. It said, `Theodosios Procopides, a Greek physicist working at CERN, the European center for particle physics, was found shot to death today. Procopides, who received his Ph.D. from Oxford, was director of the Tachyon-Tardyon Collider at —"

"Say that again," said Theo.

"The Tachyon-Tardyon Collider," said DeVries. She was mispronouncing "tachyon," saying it with a CH blend instead of a K sound. "I'd never heard those words before."

"There's no such collider," said Theo. "At least, not yet. Please, go on."

"... director of the Tachyon-Tardyon Collider at CERN. Dr. Procopides had been with CERN for twenty-three years. No motive has been suggested for the killing, but robbery has been ruled out, as Dr. Procopides's wallet was found on him. The physicist was apparently shot sometime between noon and 1:00 p.m. local time yesterday. The investigation is continuing. Dr. Procopides is survived by his ..."

"Yes? Yes?"

"I'm sorry, that's all it said."

"You mean your vision ended before you finished reading the article?"

There was a small silence. "Well, not exactly. The rest of the article was off-screen, and instead of touching the page-down button — I could clearly see such a button on the side of the reading device — I went on to select another article." She paused. "I'm sorry, Dr. Procopides. I — the 2009 me — was interested in what the rest of the story said, but the 2030 version didn't seem to care. I did try to will her — to will me — to touch the page-down control, but it didn't work."

"So you don't know who killed me, or why?"

"I am sorry."

"And the paper you were reading — you're sure that it was the then-current one? You know, the October 23, 2030, one."

"Actually, no. There was a — what would you call it? A status line? There was a status line at the top of the reader that said the date and the name of the paper quite prominently: The Johannesburg Star, Tuesday, October 22, 2030. So I guess it was yesterday's paper, so to speak." She paused. "I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news."

Theo was quiet for a time, trying to digest all this. It was hard enough dealing with the fact that he might be dead in a mere twenty years, but the idea that someone might kill him was almost too much to bear.

"Ms. DeVries, thank you," he said. "If you recall any other details — anything at all — please, please let me know. And please do fax me the transcript you mentioned." He gave her his fax number.

"I will," she said. "I — I'm sorry; you sound like a nice young man. I hope you can figure out who did it — who's going to do it — and find a way to prevent it."


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RJS Winnipeg bestsellers


Fall-out, no doubt, from the wonderful launch party for the FlashForward TV series at McNally Robinson Polo Park in Winnipeg, and from my appearance promoting Wake at Thin Air: Winnipeg International Writers Festival:

This week, Wake is the #5 bestselling hardcover fiction title at McNally Robinson's Winnipeg stores, and FlashForward is the #3 bestselling mass-market title.

And last week -- the week the TV series based on my novel debuted -- FlashForward was the #2 bestselling mass-market title there.

Here are the full lists (PDFs):

Week of September 27, 2009

Week of October 4, 2009
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CERN terrorist?

My novel FlashForward is set at CERN -- the European Organization for Nuclear Research -- and deals specifically with the Large Hadron Collider, so the breaking news -- just this past hour -- that a particle physicist working on the LHC at CERN has just been arrested as a possible terrorist with links to al-Qaeda has caught my interest, to say the least. See the Associated Press and the BBC.

Nobel prizes also figure prominently in my novel, so the news today that Barack Obama just won the Nobel Peace Prize also is of interest.
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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Amazon.co.uk bestseller: #66 overall, #6 in genre, #1 in SF


The British edition of FlashForward (pictured above), the novel by Robert J. Sawyer upon which the new TV series is based, is a bestseller at Amazon.co.uk, the British version of Amazon.com.

It's reached at least as high as sales rank #66 of all titles in the store (and, at this moment is #81).

More: it is currently the #6 best-selling genre-fiction title in the entire store:
  1. Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
  2. The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown
  3. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson
  4. The Burning Land by Bernard Cornwell
  5. The Shack by William P. Young
  6. FlashForward by Robert J. Sawyer
  7. Hard Girls by Martina Cole
  8. Scarlet Women by Jessie Keane
  9. A Place of Greater Safety by Hilary Mantel
  10. Dissolution by C.J. Sansom
And it's currently #1 on the science-fiction bestsellers list:
  1. FlashForward by Robert J. Sawyer
  2. Tom's Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce
  3. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
  4. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
  5. The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli,
  6. High-Rise by J.G. Ballard
  7. Batman: The Killing Joke (Deluxe Edition) by Moore & Bolland
  8. Batman: Dark Knight Returns by Miller & Janson
  9. Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
  10. Batman: Year One by Miller and Mazzuchelli

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Monday, October 5, 2009

FlashForward TV series now sold to 100 territories; translation rights to the novel


The TV series FlashForward, made by ABC Studios in Los Angeles, and based on Robert J. Sawyer's novel of the same name, has now sold to a staggering 100 territories worldwide.

Recent additions: AXN (Central and Eastern Europe), AXN (Japan), Channel 1 (Russia), Fox International Channels (Russia), M-Net (Africa), Orbit Showtime (Middle East), ProSieben (Germany),TF1 (France) and TV4 (Sweden) have all acquired the series.

More information in this article.

Translation rights to the novel FlashForward have sold in numerous languages. but we're always looking to add more. Author Sawyer controls all non-English-language rights; publishers can contact him at sawyer@sfwriter.com and he'll put you in touch with his agents who handle his foreign rights, translation rights, and overseas sales.

The novel won Canada's top SF award and Europe's top SF award, and received a starred review, denoting a work of exceptional merit from Publishers Weekly.

Other reviews of the novel FlashForward:
  • "Great storytelling" --Boston Globe
  • "Fresh and startling" --Library Journal
  • "Intellectually and dramatically satisfying" --Orlando Sentinel
  • "Sawyer manipulates an intricate plot brilliantly" --Denver Rocky Mountain News
  • "Unbelievably cool" --SciFi Weekly
  • "A gripping novel" --SciFi Wire
  • "An excellent novel" --Starlog
  • "An utterly fascinating premise and hard questions about free will and determinism" --Winnipeg Free Press
More reviews of the novel are here, and more about the book is here.

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Rob the cover boy


I'm the cover boy on the current issue of the Thornhill Post, a monthly publication distributed for free to affluent homes and in street-corner boxes in Thornhill, Ontario.

Thornhill is just north of Toronto. I don't live there anymore, but I did when my first novel Golden Fleece came out; and I did when I won the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Nebula Award for Best Novel of the Year (for The Terminal Experiment), and it's where I wrote FlashForward, the basis for the ABC TV series.

You can read the article here, or browse the digital edition (exactly matching the print one) here (see the cover, plus pages 30 and 31).

The cover caption reads:
THE WRITE STUFF
ROBERT J. SAWYER
This Sci-Fi Shakespeare on his hot new TV show,
his love of Thornhill and why our area is the
best outpost this side of the galaxy
The Thornhill Post is one of the PostCity magazines; I was also on the cover back in 1996, on the occasion of my Nebula win.

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Marc Guggenheim says, "Pick up the novel."


People keep asking me if they should read my novel FlashForward, or whether doing so will spoil the fun of watching the new TV series based on it.

Rather than answer that myself, I'll just repeat what FlashForward showrunner Marc Guggenheim says in the October 1, 2009, edition of The Age, a daily newspaper in Melboure, Australia:
Guggenheim hopes the show's fans will pick up Sawyer's book. "That's part of the fun, trying to figure out what has happened, and I really encourage people to play along, pick up the novel, you never know what inspired us, what we used, or whether I'm misdirecting you by saying we didn't take anything from the novel. As for the show, record it, pause it, glean through it for hidden clues. That's part of the experience for some people."
You can read the full interview with Marc here, and more about the novel is here.
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British edition of FlashForward

The British edition of FlashForward -- my novel which is the basis of the TV series of the same name -- published by Orion's Gollancz imprint, is due to hit stores in the UK next week. My UK editor, Simon Spanton, just wrote to say they've already gone back to press for a second printing, because new bookstore orders keep pouring in. Woohoo!
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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

CERN interviews RJS about FF on ABC


My novel FlashForward, the basis for the ABC TV series of the same name, is largely set at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research.

CERN now has a video interview with me, conducted by horror writer Stacey Cochran, and a print interview with me, conducted by CERN's Antonella Del Rosso, on the CERN website. How cool is that?

Watch and read here.

[Photo caption: CERN / In his own words: Robert J. Sawyer on FlashForward]

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Missed the first episode of FlashForward?


The first episode, "No More Good Days," is legally online for American and Canadian viewers.

Americans can watch it at ABC, and Canadians at CTV.

Info about the novel by Robert J. Sawyer that it's based on his here.

Enjoy!
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Monday, September 28, 2009

CBC Radio loves the Robman


On Saturday, September 26, 2009, I was interviewed on CBC Radio One's pop-culture program Definitely Not the Opera, hosted by Sook-Yin Lee (above in 2007, with Robert J. Sawyer), in an interview recorded at Thin Air: Winnipeg International Writers' Festival.

On Monday, September 28, 2009, I was interviewed on CBC Radio One's Q, hosted by Jian Ghomeshi (below, photographed today with Rob).

And earlier this month, on Saturday, September 5, 2009, I was interviewed on CBC Radio One's The Next Chapter, hosted by Shelagh Rogers.

All three interviews were about my novel FlashForward, and the hit ABC TV series based on it -- and all three interviews are now online as MP3 files:

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A reminder: FlashForward is available as an audio book


Blackstone Audiobooks has a wonderful unabridged reading of FlashForward, the Robert J. Sawyer novel that the hit ABC TV series is based on. The reader is Mark Deakins, and he does a fabulous job (I recently listened to the whole thing during my morning treadmilling sessions).

You can download it from Audible.com or Amazon.com, or buy it on CDs from Amazon or anywhere else that sells audiobooks.

All of my Audible.com titles are here.
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FlashForward reaches #164 on Amazon.com


Woohoo! On September 26, 2009, the Tor mass-market paperback of my novel FlashForward, basis for the ABC TV series of the same name, hit "Amazon.com Sales Rank: #164 in Books" -- the highest I've ever been. (It's currently #424). Not bad for a ten-year-old book!
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Saturday, September 26, 2009

Screen captures of my little FlashForward cameo


I'm very briefly in the first scene of the third act of the first episode of FlashForward, the ABC TV series based on my novel of the same name.

Remember the scene that ends with the guy watching the TVs through the store window with Joe Fiennes's character, and the guy says, "It's the whole world." Then there's a commerical break, and when we come back, Joe's character gets a call from Sonya Walger's character; I'm in the background of two of the shots of Sonya, talking on a cellphone.

Here are two wide-screen screen captures of Robert J. Sawyer's cameo in the FlashForward pilot, courtesy of FlashForwardTV.com.

Rob to the left of Sonya

Rob to the right of Sonya

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ABC debut episode credits as aired

Here are screen captures of the credits for Robert J. Sawyer from the ABC TV series FlashForward, as it first aired on Thursday, September 24, 2009.

The card "Based on the novel by Robert J. Sawyer" is the first card in the closing credits; the closing credits aired over scenes of upcoming epsisodes of FlashForward, and the shared cared "Consultant: Robert J. Sawyer" happened to have the series logo in the background.





Other credit screen captures are here and here.

The credits read:
Based on the Novel by
Robert J. Sawyer
and a bit later in the closing credits I also share this card:
Consultant
Robert J. Sawyer

Costume Designer
Kathleen Detoro

Costume Supervisor
Robyn Williams


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Canadian Press video interview with RJS


The Canadian Press has a video interview with Robert J. Sawyer about FlashForward, the TV sereis based on his novel of the same name, over at the website for The Globe and Mail: Canada's National Newspaper. You can watch it online here.

(Interview recorded at CTV's Queen Street facility in Toronto on August 11, 2009, and posted on the Globe's site on September 24, 2009.)
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FlashForward credits from CTV

ABC did a squeeze-and-tease on the ending credits of FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel of the same name, devoting most of the screen to a promotion for future episodes of the series. But CTV's /A\ in Canada ran the credits full screen. Here are screen captures from the streaming-video version of the first episode (which Canadian viewers can watch on the CTV.ca website). This will presumably be the DVD/Blu-Ray version of the credtis, as well.







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Friday, September 25, 2009

National Post on "The Man Who Knew Too Much"

Yesterday's National Post -- a major Canadian daily newspaper available coast-to-coast -- ran a great interview with Robert J. Sawyer about FlashForward (accompanied by a great photo!)

You can read the article online here; the author is Mark Medley and the photographer is Peter J. Thompson.

Below is how the article appeared in the printed newspaper.



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The ratings are in: FlashForward is a hit!


The overnight Nielsen TV ratings are in -- and FlashForward, the TV series based on Robert J. Sawyer's novel of the same name, is a hit!

Detailed ratings info, courtesy of The Futon Critic.

More info, from TV By The Numbers.
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Nice to be the first thing the Prime Minister saw over breakfast

Cool call-out above the fold on page 1 of the Ottawa Citizen, the largest-circulation newspaper in Canada's capital city:


Even nicer article inside by Tom Spears, the Citizen's science reporter inside. The article begins: "That there's fiction in science fiction is pretty obvious. But Canadian author Rob Sawyer also wants you to remember the science half, especially with one of his 20 novels coming out as a televised series."


You can read the whole article right here.
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Thursday, September 24, 2009

National Post interviews Robert J. Sawyer


Today's National Post -- a major Canadian daily newspaper, available coast to coast -- interviews me about tonight's debut of the TV series FlashForward, based on my novel of the same name.

The terrific photo above, taken by Post photographer Peter J. Thompson, accompanies the article, which was written by Mark Medley.

FlashForward premieres tonight -- Thursday, September 24, 2009 -- at 8:00 p.m. / 7:00 p.m. Central on ABC in the US and CTV's /A\ in Canada.

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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Reminder: Winnipeg FlashForward launch party begins at 6:30 on Thursday


Those darned timezones! Thin Air: Winnipeg International Writers Festival, in conjunction with CTV, is hosting a public viewing of the pilot episode of FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel, as it airs on Thursday, September 24, 2009. The event will be held at McNally Robinson Polo Park in Winnipeg, with me doing commentary before the show, during the commercial breaks, and afterwards.

But the start time for this event is 6:30 p.m. (not an hour later as previously announced), because FlashForward airs at 7:00 p.m. Central Time -- including Winnipeg. D'oh!

Details are here.
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TIME.com profiles Robert J. Sawyer


Click this text for full-size video at TIME.com

It doesn't get much better than this! TIME.COM -- the website of Time magazine -- has just posted a 6-minute video profile of me and the science behind my novel FlashForward.

(Indeed, right now, it's promoted on top of the the main page of TIME.com, which is as close as I'll ever get to being on the cover of Time!)

The interview with me was done Thursday, August 27, 2009, in Los Angeles, at a location shoot for FlashForward. It's terrific!

The interview is hosted by Brian Malow. Special thanks to Nicole Marostica of ABC Studios for facilitating the shoot.

Watch the interview right here.

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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

More broadcasters for FlashForward


The list of broadcasters for FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel of the same name, just keeps growing. The show has now sold to broadcasters in 44 territories around the world including:
  • Australia: Seven
  • Canada: /A\
  • Cyprus: Fox International
  • Finland: Nelonen
  • France: TF1
  • Greece: Fox International
  • Hong Kong: TVB
  • Iceland: RUV
  • India: Zee Cafe
  • Ireland: RTE
  • Korea: OCN
  • Malaysia: Media Prima
  • Netherlands: SBS
  • New Zealand: TVNZ
  • Norway: TV2
  • Philipines: ABS-CBN
  • Portugal: AXN
  • Singapore: MediaCorp and Signtel
  • Southeast Asia: Fox International
  • Spain: AXN
  • Spain: Cuatro
  • Turkey: Digiturk
  • UK: Five
  • US: ABC
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Starred review for FlashForward


Flashing back to April 1999, when my novel FlashForward received a starred review -- denoting a book of exceptional merit -- from Publishers Weekly, the US trade journal of the book-publishing industry.

The review concluded: "This first-rate, philosophical journey, a terrific example of idea-driven SF, should have wide appeal."

The full review of the novel (which has a few spoilers for the book) appeared in the April 19, 1999, edition of PW:
FlashForward
by Robert J. Sawyer
[starred review]

A science experiment that unwittingly shuts down all human consciousness for two minutes is the catalyst for a creative exploration of fate, free will and the nature of the universe in Sawyer's soul-searching new work (after Factoring Humanity)

In April 2009, Lloyd and Theo, two scientists at the European Organization for Particle Physics (CERN), run an experiment that accidentally transports the world's consciousness 20 years into the future. When humanity reawakens a moment later, chaos rules. Vehicles whose drivers passed out plow into one another; people fall or maim themselves.

But that's just the beginning. After the horror is sorted out, each character tries desperately to ensure or avoid his or her future. Trapped by his guilt for causing so much destruction and driven by a need to rationalize, Lloyd tries to prove that free will is a myth. Theo discovers that he will be murdered and begins to hunt down his killer — tempting fate as in the Greek dramas of his ancestors. Some people start on their appointed roads early, others give up on life because of what they've seen.

Using a third-person omniscient narrator, Sawyer shifts seamlessly among the perspectives of his many characters, anchoring the story in small details. This first-rate, philosophical journey, a terrific example of idea-driven SF, should have wide appeal.



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The differences between writing for print and screen

The Dragon Page interviews me about the differences between writing for print and writing for television and film. It's a good, meaty interview, and you can listen right here.

We talk about the current adaptation of The Time Traveler's Wife, about Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, about House, about The Simpsons, about the new Battlestar Galactica, and of course about FlashForward. And at the end, we talk about my new novel Wake.

I come in at the 16 minutes 0 seconds mark, and go to almost the end of the show, 43 minutes 8 seconds mark.

(The book I recommend during the interview is Writing the TV Drama Series: How to Succeed as a Professional Writer in TV by Pamela Douglas.)
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Symmetry Breaking interviews RJS


Symmetry Breaking: Extra Dimensions of Particle Physics -- a joint publication of Fermilab and SLAC -- interviews Robert J. Sawyer about his novel FlashForward, and the novel's setting at CERN. You can read the article right here. The interview is by Fermilab's Katie Yurkewicz.
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Monday, September 21, 2009

The RJS fans' guide to watching the debut of FlashForward


FlashForward, the ABC TV series based on my novel of the same name, debuts (as I write this) in three days -- on Thursday, September 24, 2009, at 8:00 p.m. Eastern and Pacific and 7:00 p.m. Central. In the United States, it's on ABC and in Canada it's on CTV's /A\ Channels.

Things to watch for:


MY CAMEO:

I have a small, non-speaking cameo in the first episode about halfway through (blink and you'll miss me!).

Sonya Walger plays Dr. Olivia Benford, a surgeon; there's a scene in which she's walking down a long hospital corridor while talking on her cell phone to her husband, FBI agent Mark Benford, played by Joseph Fiennes.

Behind her, in the same blue shirt I'm wearing in the photo above, talking on his own cell phone is ... me! My thanks to director David S. Goyer (on the right in the above photo) for cheerfully including this little bit of business for me; it was fun!



My CREDITS

My credits appear at the end of the episode. The very first card in the closing credits says:
Based on the Novel by
Robert J. Sawyer
and a bit later in the closing credits I also share this card:
Consultant
Robert J. Sawyer

Costume Designer
Kathleen Detoro

Costume Supervisor
Robyn Williams



[Screen captures taken from the 17-minute preview at abc.com; actual closing credits may have different background images]

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"The Aurora Award-winning novel that started it all!"


The back cover of the new TV-series tie-in editions of my 1999 novel FlashForward proudly proclaims "The Aurora Award-winning novel that started it all!"

And indeed, FlashForward did win the 2000 Prix Aurora Award -- Canada's top honour in science fiction and fantasy -- for "Best Long-Form Work in English" (yes, the award category names were decided by a committee; it's de facto the Best English Novel Award -- "English," because Auroras are also given for work in Canada's other official language, French).

Canadian SF&F readers from coast to coast nominate and vote for the Auroras, and they are presented at a ceremony at the annual Canadian National Science Fiction Convention (or "CanVention").

The awards given in 2000 were for work first published in 1999. That was a very strong year for Canadian SF&F, I must say, as the list of nominees in the Long-Form English category attests:
  • Beholder's Eye by Julie E. Czerneda, DAW Books
  • Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson, Warner Books
  • FlashForward by Robert J. Sawyer, Tor Books
  • Starfish by Peter Watts, Tor Books
  • Bios by Robert Charles Wilson, Tor Books
  • Death Drives a Semi by Edo van Belkom, Quarry Press
(As it happened, I also won the Best Short-Form Work in English Award that year, too; you can read my winning story "Stream of Consciousness" here.)

And a press release about my double Aurora win that year is here.


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AMCtv.com interviews RJS


AMCtv.com -- the website of AMC (originally, "American Movie Classics"), a US cable channel -- recently phoned me up and interviewed me about my novels FlashForward and Wake, and the TV adaptation of the former. You can read the interview, by Clayton Neuman, right here.

(And, I must say, there is lots of other good SF-related material on this site in their "SciFi Scanner" section -- including, recently, an interview with Dune author Brian Herbert, and columns by Mary Robinette Kowal and John Scalzi. Start here, and keep scrolling.)
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Sunday, September 20, 2009

FlashForward: One of the Year's Best


Not the TV series (although it undoubtedly is), but the book.

Back in December 1999, Barnes and Noble released a list of its picks for the best science fiction and fantasy novels of that year: Robert J. Sawyer's FlashForward was listed third, with the following review:
Robert J. Sawyer consistently makes intelligent, mind-blowing science fiction accessible to the mainstream reader with his efficient, easy-flowing prose, his exciting ideas, and his superior character development.

Over the past several years, Sawyer's stunning thrillers have produced multiple Hugo and Nebula nominations, enough for most to recognize him as the leader of SF's next-generation pack.

His newest novel, the near-future FlashForward, is every bit as good, if not better, than his previously recognized high-tech whirlwinds.
The full list:
  1. Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon
  2. Neil Gaiman, Stardust
  3. Robert J. Sawyer, FlashForward
  4. Michael Crichton, Timeline
  5. Orson Scott Card, Ender's Shadow
  6. Elizabeth Haydon, Rhapsody
  7. Brian Herbert & Kevin J. Anderson, Dune: House Atreides
  8. Brian Jacques, Marlfox: A Tale from Redwall
  9. L.E. Modesitt Jr., Gravity Dreams
  10. Guy Gavriel Kay, Sailing to Sarantium
  11. George R.R. Martin, A Clash of Kings
  12. Vernor Vinge, A Deepness in the Sky
  13. Richard Bowes, Minions of the Moon
  14. Elizabeth Hand, Black Light
  15. Frank M. Robinson, Waiting
  16. Terry Goodkind, Soul of the Fire
  17. Ken MacLeod, The Cassini Division
  18. Brendan DuBois, Resurrection Day
  19. Ben Bova, Return to Mars
  20. Sean McMullen, Souls in the Great Machine
  21. Thomas Harlan, The Shadow of Ararat
You can read more about the novel FlashForward by Robert J. Sawyer here.

Pictured: Above, the 2009 TV series tie-in edition; below, the original mass-market paperback cover from 2000 (the hardcover came out in 1999).


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Friday, September 18, 2009

Wall Street Journal on FlashForward

... including the list of books David S. Goyer has the staff writers read (beside my novel FlashForward, of course!). See the article here.

I visited the writers' room for FlashForward earlier this month, but didn't feel comfortable blogging about it -- but you can read what David Goyer has to say about the room in this article.
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Paul Levinson podcasts RJS


Paul Levinson -- himself a very fine SF writer, and the author of The Plot to Save Socrates -- interviews me for 36 minutes on his podcast Light On Light Through about FlashForward.

You can listen here.
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Thursday, September 17, 2009

How the heck did I know the new Pope was going to be Benedict XVI?

I reveal all in a short video interview with the CBC Book Club, which is doing my FlashForward this month. The interview is here.
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T-minus 1 week and counting


FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel of the same name, premieres one week from today in North America (at 8:00 p.m. / 7:00 p.m. Central).

In the United States, it's on ABC.

In Canada, it's on CTV's /A\ series of channels.

The pilot is fabulous.


Pictured: actor Joseph Fiennes and author Robert J. Sawyer on the set of ABC's FlashForward.
Adapting award-winning author Robert J. Sawyer's revolutionary novel, executive producers David S. Goyer (co-writer of Batman Begins and The Dark Knight), Brannon Braga (24, Star Trek: Enterprise), Marc Guggenheim (Brothers & Sisters, Eli Stone), Jessika Borszicky (Revelations) and producer Mark H. Ovitz (October Road) invite you to embark on a journey to answer the question, "if you knew what your future held, what would you do?" -- ABC.COM


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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

FlashForward reruns already?


Yes -- and in the best possible way!

The debut episode of FlashForward -- the ABC TV series based on my novel of the same name -- airs Thursday, September 24, at 8:00 p.m. (7:00 p.m. Central) on ABC.

And the very next night -- Friday, September 25, also at 8:00 p.m. (7:00 p.m. Central), ABC is repeating the series opener (which is called "No More Good Days").

The following week, on Thursday, October 1, at 8:00 p.m. (7:00 p.m. Central), ABC is showing our second episode, "White to Play."

And the very next night -- Friday, October 2, at 8/7, they're repeating "White to Play."

This is amazing support by ABC (which has been super-amazing all along).
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Monday, September 14, 2009

Portuguese edition of FlashForward coming

My wonderful agent Ralph Vicinanza just sold Portuguese rights to FlashForward, bringing to 18 the number of languages my work has or will be appearing in: Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Dutch, French, English, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, and Spanish. w00t! (And le w00t! and el w00té! and ...)
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Sunday, September 13, 2009

Winnipeg FlashForward screening time change


Those darned timezones! Thin Air: Winnipeg International Writers Festival, in conjunction with CTV, is hosting a public viewing of the pilot episode of FlashForward, the TV series based on my novel, as it airs on Thursday, September 24, 2009. The event will be held at McNally Robinson Polo Park in Winnipeg, with me doing commentary before the show, during the commercial breaks, and afterwards.

But the start time for this event is 6:30 (not an hour later as previously announced), because FlashForward airs at 7:00 p.m. Central Time -- including Winnipeg. D'oh!

Details are here.
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Saturday, September 12, 2009

Transcript of my CBC Book Club online chat

... is now available here. (The Book Club is doing my FlashForward this month.)
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Thursday, September 10, 2009

Reviews of the novel Flashforward


Reviews of the Aurora Award-winning novel FlashForward by Robert J. Sawyer, basis for the ABC TV series of the same name:

"A thoroughly entertaining novel. The characters and story keep you turning the pages to see how this future turns out." — CNN

"A creative, soul-searching exploration of fate, free will, and the nature of the universe. This first-rate, philosophical journey should have wide appeal." — Publishers Weekly (starred review, denoting a book of exceptional merit)

"The idea behind this book is unbelievably cool. Sawyer fully examines the double-edged sword of foreknowledge. Readers will enjoy Flashforward's stunningly neat wrap-up." — SciFi.com

"A novel full of very human pain and confusion on several levels, from the emotional ones of grief and love to the intellectual ones of theoretical physics and philosophy." — Analog

"An utterly fascinating premise, and hard questions about free will and determinism. Sawyer imagines both the poignant and the darkly humorous sides to knowing one's own future." — Winnipeg Free Press

"Great storytelling, with well-developed characters that you care about." — The Boston Globe

"Sawyer's strength lies in combining human-sized problems with cutting-edge science; he does a masterful job of blending them here." — The Davis Enterprise (Davis, California)

"Needless to say, I like Flashforward. Sawyer manipulates an intricate plot brilliantly." — Denver Rocky Mountain News

"Sawyer's book is both intellectually and dramatically satisfying." — The Orlando Sentinel

"Sawyer brings a fresh and startling approach to a tale that explores the repercussions of knowing the future." — Library Journal

"An intricate examination of fate and free will. Sawyer's ingenious conundrum and his deft handling of his characters' differing viewpoints make Flashforward a provoking read." — Maclean's: Canada's Weekly Newsmagazine

"An excellent SF novel, a perfect blend of cosmic speculation and human drama, and Sawyer's best book yet. Flashforward's plot lets Sawyer muse on true love, free will, quantum reality, and the nature of consciousness while telling a funny, wrenching tale of fallible humans in a mystifying universe." — Starlog

More about the novel FlashForward

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The Toronto Star interviews Jessika and David Goyer about adapting FlashForward

Interview by Rob Salem in today's edition of Canada's largest-circulation newspaper; the online version is here. Says David, very kindly:
We had an amazing time figuring out how to adapt it. I felt like I'd won the lottery of television writers.
Awww. :)
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FlashForward bookstore display stands

Woohoo! In cooperation with ABC, Tor Books in the United States has produced terrific floor-display stands (sometimes called "dumps") for the new mass-market edition of my novel FlashForward, which is the basis of the TV series premiering two weeks from today.

Here are a couple of shots of the stand in a Barnes and Noble in Syracuse, New York, as taken by my friend Dennis Pettit.

(Real RJS trivia buffs will recognize "Pettit" as the name of Afsan's apprentice in my 1994 novel Foreigner; that Pettit is named in honor of Dennis.)







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Wednesday, September 9, 2009

CBC podcasts Rollback and features FlashForward


The CBC -- the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation -- is podcasting Robert J. Sawyer's Hugo-nominated Rollback in 25 fifteen-minute installments read by Battlestar Galactica's Alessandro Juliani: Rollback Podcasts

And the CBC Book Club is featuring Sawyer's Aurora Award-winning novel FlashForward this month: CBC Book Club

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European broadcasters for FlashForward

The list keeps growing:

AXN (Spain, Portugal), Digiturk (Turkey), Fox International Channels (Greece, Cyprus), Nelonen (Finland), RUV (Iceland), SBS (Netherlands), TF1 (France), TV2 (Norway), Cuatro (Spain), RTE (Ireland), Five (UK).


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Monday, September 7, 2009

CBC's Shelagh Rogers interviews RJS



CBC Radio One's The Next Chapter, hosted by Shelagh Rogers, interviewed Robert J. Sawyer on Saturday, September 5, about his novel FlashForward, which is the CBC's Book Club pick this month. You can download the interview here (48-minute MP3 file; Rob comes on at the 20 minute 50 seconds mark, and goes to the 32 minute 30 second mark).
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"Robert J. Sawyer Thinks Scientists are Sexy"

That's title of the first of several short videos produced by the CBC in honour of the selection of my novel FlashForward as the CBC Book Club pick for September 2009. You can watch the video -- and get some glimpses of my home -- here.
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Canadian Press newswire on the spate of Canadian novels coming to TV this fall

... including, of course, FlashForward, based on my novel of the same name. The article is here.
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Friday, September 4, 2009

Links to online ordering of new editions of FlashForward


Whether you want to get the new mass-market or trade paperback edition of my novel FlashForward -- basis for the ABC TV series that premieres in 20 days -- from Amazon or Barnes and Noble or Borders or McNally Robinson or Chapters or Books-A-Million or a nearby independent, you can easily order copies online through the links at the bottom of this page.
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Tuesday, September 1, 2009

FlashForward is the CBC's September Book Club pick


My Aurora Award-winning novel FlashForward, basis for the upcoming ABC TV series of the same name, is the CBC's Book Club pick for September 2009. Join the fun all month long here -- regardless of where you live in the world.

To help your along, here's a Book Club discussion guide for FlashForward (spoiler warning -- don't read the questions until after you've finished the book!).

Pictured: Robert J. Sawyer and CBC Book Club host Hannah Sung, at Rob's home in Mississauga.
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Sunday, August 30, 2009

New editions of FlashForward


My Aurora Award-winning novel FlashForward has been continuously in print from Tor Books, New York, since it was first published in 1999. However, this week two new editions of the book come out to tie-in with the ABC TV series of the same name, which debuts on Thursday, September 24, 2009. The new cover, incorporating the official series logo courtesy of ABC Entertainment, is above. The book is available in both mass-market (regular-sized) paperback and trade (large format) trade paperbback. Woohoo!
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FlashForward promo in Times Square

Check out the promo for the TV series based on my novel FlashForward running in New York's Times Square in this YouTube video courtesty of my friend Lorne Kates.
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Thursday, August 13, 2009

The view from Sunset Boulevard


Courtesy of my Hollywood agent Vince Gerardis of Created By, a view today down Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. How cool is that?

Pictured: Giant billboard for FlashForward covering the side of a ten-story building.

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Monday, August 10, 2009

National Post calls FlashForward a "tectonic shift"


Canada's National Post -- a major daily newspaper -- today reported on the pilot for FlashForward, saying this:
Every so often, a new TV show comes along that's so eye-filling, so visually startling and so emotionally gripping that it feels like a tectonic shift may be about to occur in the popular culture.

ABC saved the best for last, unveiling its pilot episode of the secretive, big-budget futuristic thriller FlashForward, based on the novel by Canadian Robert J. Sawyer.

In an age when broadcast TV faces across-the-board cost-cutting and scaled-down ambitions, FlashForward represents a throwback to an earlier age. Not since the pilot episode of Lost has a single hour of network TV looked -- or felt -- more like a feature film.

FlashForward, about a two-minute, 17-second blackout that affects every person on Earth, is full of suspense and unanswered questions. Based on its initial screening, though, it's also full of genuine, human emotion.

FlashForward is more than just a futuristic What If' tale. In a notably buzz-free fall season, it's a reminder of just how powerful the medium of TV can be, how it can move a mass audience to tears, laughter and excitement by turns.

FlashForward is, quite simply, the most eye-filling, heart-wrenching pilot episode of a new network drama series since Lost -- and it gives us all hope that this may not be such a bad fall TV season after all.

Who are we to argue? You can read the full article here.

[Update: it also appeared on Tuesday, August 11, 2009, in The Montreal Gazette: you can read that version here.]

Photo: Robert J. Sawyer, author of the novel FlashForward, flanked by the writers of the pilot script based on his book: David S. Goyer on the left, and Brannon Braga on the right.

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Friday, July 24, 2009

Dominic Monaghan joins FlashForward cast

Okay, admittedly it was the worst-kept secret in television (as David S. Goyer quipped today at San Diego Comic-Con), but it can now be officially announced that Dominic Monaghan, late (literally) of Lost, has joined the cast of FlashForward.

See here.

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Sunday, July 19, 2009

Entertainment Weekly on FlashForward


The July 24, 2009, edition of Entertainment Weekly devotes half a page to the FlashForward TV series. The article, entitled simply "FLASHFORWARD", begins:
Robert J. Sawyer's 1999 novel of the same name inspired this drama about a global catastrophe ...
The article includes the picture below of series stars John Cho and Joseph Fiennes.


FlashForward was previously featured in the February 20, 2009, issue of Entertainment Weekly.

More about the FlashForward novel by Robert J. Sawyer

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Monday, July 13, 2009

FlashForward and Kant's Third Conundrum


In 2000, my Italian editor, Sergio Fanucci of Solaria, asked me to write an introduction to the Italian edition of my novel FlashForward. Here's what I had to say . . .

The German philosopher Immanuel Kant claimed that the three fundamental problems of metaphysics are "Is there life after death?," "Does God exist?," and "Do we have free will?"

Without it really being a conscious plan, I've ended up writing novels on each of those themes. My 1995 book The Terminal Experiment (for which I was fortunate enough to win the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Nebula Award) dealt with a biomedical engineer who discovered scientific proof for the existence of the human soul. And my 2000 novel Calculating God attempts to use science to answer the question of whether or not God exists.

As for Kant's third conundrum, that's the province of FlashForward. There's no doubt that here in the western world most people do believe they have free will ... and yet many of us, myself included, are familiar with the experience of making a commitment, for example, to lose weight, only to find ourselves falling off our diets a few days or weeks later. Despite our best conscious intentions, our fate turns out differently than we intended, almost as if we really didn't have free will after all.

I've long been interested in classical Greek drama; Sophocles's Oedipus Rex is one of my favorite plays, and I had the privilege in 1977 of standing on the stage at Epidaurus and shouting Agamemnon's name toward the heavens. But Greek tragedy takes exactly the opposite underlying assumption: it believes that our futures are foreordained, that our destiny is unavoidable. My experience with dieting seems, on a smaller scale, like Oedipus's utter failure, despite his devout wish, to avoid fulfilling the prophecy that he would murder his father and marry his mother: regardless of either his or my best intentions, we ended up doing exactly what we'd vowed not to do.

Which worldview is correct? That of the Greeks, who believed our destinies were inescapable, or that of people today who insist that we are the masters of our own futures? I certainly find the modern idea more appealing, but mere appeal is hardly sufficient enough reason for a rational person to believe it to be true. Is there really any valid reason to accept our belief in free will as more valid than the Greek belief in predetermination?

As a science-fiction writer, I began to wonder what physics and quantum mechanics had to tell us about this age-old question. And, to my surprise, the answer is a great deal, and most of it, building on the work of Hermann Minkowski, points to the unsettling notion that the future is just as fixed as the past.

You're about to begin reading my novel ... but the ending of that novel is already fixed, typeset immutably on the last page of this book. You don't yet know how it's going to end, and, hopefully, the journey will surprise you along the way, but the conclusion is inevitable. Are our lives like that — a book that's already been written, with a happy or tragic ending already set in stone? Is "now" simply the page all of our minds happen to be contemplating? If so, what would happen if suddenly our minds jumped ahead a hundred pages or so, looking at a scene out of sequence, a chapter yet to come?

That's the premise of FlashForward — and I hope you enjoy reading it. Just do me a favor and don't peek ahead at the ending . . .

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Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Flashforward premieres Thursday, September 24, 2009

So says The Hollywood Reporter (and, of course, note that of all the ABC series they could choose to show a still from to illustrate this article, it's Flashforward. Yes, we rock.)
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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Boston Globe reviews Flash Forward -- the novel, not the TV series


It's a nice little capsule review that in fact makes no mention of the TV show; rather, it's a roundup of reviews of books that are being read by Boston-area book clubs, and says:
"Flash Forward," by Robert J. Sawyer. A science-fiction story that explores many of the questions of time travel and has well-developed characters that you care about. Great storytelling with good science knowledge and speculation.
The reviewer is Bob Charest, and the review is online here.


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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

CTV buys Canadian rights to Flash Forward


The Globe and Mail is reporting that CTV, Canada's largest commercial television network, has bought Canadian rights to Flash Forward, the ABC TV series based on the novel of the same name by Robert J. Sawyer.
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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The Globe and Mail already loves Flash Forward

The Globe and Mail: Canada's National Newspaper has a list today by TV critic John Doyle of "10 shows I adore already," his picks for the new TV season. Flash Forward, based on my novel of the same name, is on the list. Check it out.
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Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Flash Forward timeslot: Thursdays at 8:00 p.m. Eastern

So says TV By The Numbers, which has the whole ABC fall schedule, as announced yesterday, here.

THURSDAYS:

8:00 p.m.: “Flash Forward”

9:00 p.m.: “Grey’s Anatomy”

10:00 p.m.: “Private Practice”

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Major RJS profile in today's Winnipeg Free Press

Morley Walker, the long-time books editor of The Winnipeg Free Press, has a major, lengthy profile of Robert J. Sawyer on page 1 of today's (Thursday, May 14, 2009) Entertainment section.

(The Free Press, a major Canadian daily newspaper, is the largest-circulation paper in Manitoba.)

You can read it online right here.

An excerpt:
Robert J. Sawyer [is] Canada's most successful science-fiction author. In the last decade, as his own career has exploded, Sawyer has become one of Canada's go-to guys for science explanations and prognostications.

As the author of novels that synthesize and dramatize the latest scientific thinking, he is often called Canada's answer to Michael Crichton, the late American author of such books as Jurassic Park and The Andromeda Strain.

"I like that analogy, except for one thing," Sawyer says. "Crichton had a pessimistic view of science and technology. I am very pro-science."

Winnipeg novelist David Annandale praises Sawyer for creating engaging characters and setting them in fast-paced narrative that contains accessible scientific speculation.

"He has, I think, one of these enthusiasms for science that is genuinely joyful," says Annandale, who teaches English and film at the University of Manitoba.

"And this translates into a drive to pass on to the reader a similar passion."
The article ends with me saying: "I love my job. In the best atheist sense of the word, I feel blessed."

And then there's the sidebar, which says:
Close Encounters of the Sawyer Kind

Robert J. Sawyer was born April 29, 1960, in Ottawa. Raised in Toronto, he resides in Mississauga with his wife, poet Carolyn Clink.

In the last 20 years, he has sold 20 science-fiction novels to U.S. publishers, and his books have been translated into 14 languages.

He is one of only seven writers in history -- and the only Canadian -- to win all three of the world's top science-fiction awards for best novel of the year: the Hugo (in 2003 for Hominids), the Nebula (in 1996 for The Terminal Experiment), and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award (in 2006 for Wake).

He has also won a record 10 Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Awards (Auroras), as well as an Arthur Ellis Award from the Crime Writers of Canada.

He's also won the top science-fiction awards in China, France, Japan and Spain; in total he has received 41 national and international awards for his writing.

In 2008 was named one of the "30 most influential, innovative, and just plain powerful people in Canadian publishing" by Quill & Quire, the Canadian publishing trade journal.

He is "by any reckoning, among the most successful Canadian authors ever," according to Maclean's.

He has made almost 500 radio and TV appearances, including Canada AM, NPR's Science Friday, and Rivera Live with Geraldo Rivera.

His award-winning website,
sfwriter.com
, was the world's first science-fiction author website and has been called "the best author's page on the Internet."

ABC-TV has just purchased 13 episodes of a new sci-fi series called Flash Forward, based on Sawyer's 1999 novel. It stars Joseph Fiennes (Shakespeare in Love) and John Cho (Star Trek).


May 2009 "Author of the Month" Robert J. Sawyer at the McNally Robinson store in Toronto; this photo by Carolyn Clink ran in the Winnipeg Free Press on May 14, 2009.

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Flash Forward promo from Lost season finale


... is on YouTube alreday. It's awesome. Check it out! (Click the "HQ" in the lower right to see it in high quality.)

W00t!
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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

First time in 26 years a major US network has based a series on a Canadian novel


1983: HOTEL comes to ABC


2009: FLASH FORWARD comes to ABC

In the 500-channel universe, it's easy to lose sight of the fact that the big-four American broadcast networks -- ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox -- still dominate in terms of audience size. Nothing on cable comes close in audience reach as far as dramatic television is concerned.

And it's with considerable delight and pride that I note that the Flash Forward TV series is the first time in over a quarter of a century that a big-four US network has based a TV series on a Canadian novel.

The last -- and, I believe, only previous -- time was in 1983, with the series Hotel, based on Arthur Hailey's novel of the same name (although Hailey was not born in Canada, and he left Canada for good in 1965, he was a Canadian citizen).

Now, as it happens, two of my favourite ABC TV series when I was a teenager were based on novels, but by Americans: The Six Million Dollar Man was based on the novel Cyborg by Martin Caidin, and The Night Stalker was based on a novel by Jeff Rice. Having my novel become a series on ABC, of all places, is extra-special to me because of that.
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The ABCs of WWW


Douglas Adams famously observed that the World Wide Web was the only thing ever for which the abbreviation took three times longer to say than the full name ("World Wide Web" is three syllables, but "WWW" is nine).

But, man, reading all the coverage of the Flash Forward TV series in the trades, it's getting fatiguing to keep seeing ABC (three syllables) referred to as "the alphabet network" (six syllables), which is something Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, and othes seem to really like doing. :)
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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Today's National Post

Okay, yeah, I don't live in B.C. (British Columbia), but I'm not complaining. :) Here's the front page of the "Arts & Life" section of the Tuesday, May 12, 2009, edition of Canada's National Post, a major daily newspaper distributed coast-to-coast:


The actual article by Mark Medley appears on page A3 and runs the entire height of the page, including another photo of me. It begins thus:


The rest of the text is pretty much the same as what the paper put online yesterday (and that version will stay publicly visible forever, since it was in one of the paper's blogs); the actual text that appeared in the print edition is here (but it'll eventually be locked behind the subscribers-only wall).

The article ends with a mention of my current novel Wake (which the National Post separately reviewed here), and a photo -- nice to see Carolyn getting a photo credit in a national newspaper!


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Monday, May 11, 2009

Mississauga News article


Mississauga, where I live, is Canada's sixth largest city, with a population of 704,000; it's eastern border is Toronto's western border.

And the Mississauga newspaper is called The Mississauga News, and today they put online this nice piece about the Flash Forward TV series.

(The above photo is the Mississauga News's file photo of me, taken 27 November 2004.)
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National Post on the Flash Forward TV series



A wonderful piece by the terrific Mark Medley is online here. And note my comment, added at the end:
Many thanks for the terrific article. A small clarification, if I may. The article says, "HBO was keen at first, but passed after reading the pilot." In fact, HBO is still very keen, and retains a financial interest in the show.

It's not that HBO read the pilot and lost enthusiasm; quite the contrary -- they read the pilot, loved it, and said this could run for a hundred episodes. At HBO they tend to do just a handful of episodes of anything a year; they felt the scope of Flash Forward was something a broadcast network, doing 22 episodes a year and with bigger budgets per episode, could better do justice to.

Oh, and check out the National Post's review of my latest novel, Wake, right here.

(National Post is a major Canadian daily newspaper, headquartered in Calgary.)

Photo: series star Joseph Fiennes and Robert J. Sawyer on the set of Flash Forward
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Saturday, May 9, 2009

You know you've really made it when ...

... the account manager at your bank contacts you because he's read the news story about your TV series pick-up and wants you to come in to discuss what you're going to do with all that money. ;) Took less than 12 hours from when the news broke ... :D

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Friday, May 8, 2009

Flash Forward picked up for 13 episodes


W00t! The Hollywood Reporter and Variety and TV Guide are all reporting that late today (Friday, May 8, 2009), ABC gave a series order for Flash Forward, the TV show based on my novel of the same name.

The Hollywood Reporter says it's a 13-episode order, which is a big commitment (many shows only get six-episode initial orders).

Carolyn and I happen to be in Waterloo, Ontario, right now, having a nice evening at the home of friends Marcel Gagné and Sally Tomasevic -- so we're all celebrating now. :)

See the articles here, here, and here.


Left to right: David S. Goyer (who directed the pilot), Robert J. Sawyer, Brannon Braga (who co-authored the pilot script with David)


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

More Flash Forward promos coming?


I make no comment; I just pass on the news, this time from Entertainment Weekly:
An insider says more promos [for Flash Forward] are planned for the finales of Lost, Grey's Anatomy, and Dancing with the Stars this month.
The whole article is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Rob lands on Planet S

Planet S is the biweekly arts-and-entertainment newspaper in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, and I was on the cover of the April 9, 2009, issue, and the cover story was about me.

That story by Ashleigh Mattern, headlined, "Light Speed, Mr. Sawyer -- Engage!," is online here.

(The first word in the article refers to Wanuskewin Heritage Park, just north of Saskatoon, which honours the First Nations inhabitants of the area.)

The cover illustration by Alex Whyte shows a cyborg version of me looming over the Canadian Light Source, Canada's national synchrotron facility, at which I will be writer-in-residence for June and July 2009. (The caption on the cover says, "Fantasy Meets Fact: Sci-fi Guru Sawyer aims phasers at synchrotron!")

Says the article:
Clearly, Sawyer is a dyed-in-the-wool science geek -- but that's exactly what's made him one of Canada's most noted science fictions writers. Much of that success can be attributed to the fact that, no matter what the subject, Sawyer takes great pride in ensuring that the scientific ideas and theories in his works are grounded solidly in fact.
And, of my current novel Wake and its upcoming sequels, I'm quoted in the article as saying:
“Science fiction has too often taken a simplistic, alarmist approach to the concept of artificial intelligence. Well, I for one don’t welcome our new robot masters. This is my attempt to present a positive symbiosis -- a world where humans are no longer the smartest thing on the planet, but in which we find a way of continuing to exist without giving up our essential humanity or individuality.”


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Thursday, April 30, 2009

SciFiDimensions podcasts Rob


The terrific online SF magazine SciFi Dimensions has a meaty podcast interview with Robert J. Sawyer right here. Among other things, we talk about my new novel Wake, the forthcoming Flash Forward TV series, and author Nick DiChario, whom I publish under my Robert J. Sawyer Books imprint.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Friday, April 24, 2009

According to The Hollywood Reporter ...


I neither confirm nor deny this rumour, but The Hollywood Reporter had an article yesterday that said this:
ABC is so excited about its new project Flash Forward the network has plans to start marketing the show before its even officially ordered a series.

When viewers tune in for the 100th episode of Lost next week [on Wednesday, April 29, 2009], they will be served an extra dose of mystery. Sources said ABC will launch a stealth promo campaign for Flash during the episode ...

The mystery [ad] spots will in fact be for Flash ... Promoting a new show for next season in April -- a program that hasn't even been formerly announced yet -- is extremely unusual.

Based on Robert J. Sawyer's sci-fi novel, Flash starring Joseph Fiennes, chronicles the aftermath of a global event in which everyone in the world blacks out for 2 minutes, 17 seconds and has a mysterious vision of the future.
The full Hollywood Reporter article is here.

Note to Canadian viewers: remember to watch a US feed for Lost (from an American ABC affiliate), not the Canadian broadcast by CTV, or you won't see the Flash Forward promo(s) ... if, in fact, there are any.

Oh, and in the nice coincidence department, Lost's hundredth episode airs on April 29 -- which happens to be my birthday. :)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Flash Forward day!


Today is Flash Forward day!

My 1999 novel Flash Forward begins thus:
Chapter 1

Day One: Tuesday, April 21, 2009

A slice through spacetime ...

The control building for CERN's Large Hadron Collider was new: it had been authorized in A.D. 2004 and completed in 2006. The building enclosed a central courtyard, inevitably named "the nucleus." Every office had a window either facing in toward the nucleus or out toward the rest of CERN's sprawling campus. The quadrangle surrounding the nucleus was two stories tall, but the main elevators had four stops: the two above-ground levels; the basement, which housed boiler rooms and storage; and the minus-one-hundred-meter level, which exited onto a staging area for the monorail used to travel along the twenty-seven-kilometer circumference of the collider tunnel. The tunnel itself ran under farmers' fields, the outskirts of the Geneva airport, and the foothills of the Jura mountains ...
In my novel, on this day, the Large Hadron Collider is turned on for the first time, and everyone on Earth blacks out for a period of two minutes; during that time, people foresee their futures.

One thing I couldn't foresee a decade ago when the book came out was that ABC was going to make a TV series pilot based on my novel ... but they have, and it's great.

Another thing I couldn't foresee was that Flash Forward would still be in print (and still selling well) a decade later.

Flash Forward won Canada's Aurora Award as well as Spain's Premio UPC de Ciencia Ficción (the world's largest cash prize for science fiction writing), and it got me my first-ever starred review (denoting a book of exceptional merit -- an honor also bestowed on my most recent novel, Wake ) in Publishers Weekly (in the April 19, 1999, edition), which called the novel "A creative, soul-searching exploration of fate, free will, and the nature of the universe," and said, "Sawyer shifts seamlessly among the perspectives of his many characters, anchoring the story in small details. This first-rate, philosophical journey, a terrific example of idea-driven SF, should have wide appeal."

And, well, I guess it has. :)

Happy Flash Forward day! My all our futures turn out to be bright!

You can read more about Flash Forward (including the rest of the opening chapters) here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Monday, April 20, 2009

From their mouth to God's ears


From The Hollywood Reporter:
Pilots building early buzz
ABC's sci-fi drama 'Flash Forward' among the hot projects

By Nellie Andreeva

April 19, 2009, 11:00 PM ET
Although most pilots -- especially on the comedy side -- are yet to be completed, several projects are enjoying early buzz based on screenings, testings, dailies or the strength of their script and cast.

ABC's sci-fi drama "Flash Forward" starring Joseph Fiennes is a lock for a series order.
The article is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Thursday, April 2, 2009

USA Today has first official Flash Forward picture


USA Today yesterday had the first official photo from the ABC series pilot based on my novel Flash Forward (above; click for larger version; photo by ABC's Ron Tom), and in their article they say:
There are still a few big bets [for the fall TV season]:

• ABC is spending $7 million on Flash Forward, an ambitious series based on the sci-fi novel that it hopes is the next Lost. (Everyone blacks out for 2 minutes and 17 seconds and has a vision of the future.)
The coverage at USA Today Online is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Monday, March 30, 2009

The interviewer speaks

K. Stoddard Hayes, who did the recent SciFi.com interviews with me about Flash Forward, has some nice things to say about the novel in her blog here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

More on Flash Forward at SciFi.com

Part 2 (of 2) of SciFi.com's interview with me about the ABC adaptation of my novel Flash Forward is now up right here.

The interviewer is Karen Hayes.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Monday, March 23, 2009

SciFi.com (or is that Syfy.com?) interview about Flash Forward


Check it out: "Author Got Misty on the Set."

Above: David S. Goyer and Brannon Braga on the set of Flash Forward, based on the novel by Robert J. Sawyer

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Saturday, March 14, 2009

And it's a wrap!


Today is, I believe, the last day of filming on the Flash Forward pilot (based on my novel of the same name). I can't wait to see the finished product!

The buzz has been amazing. The Hollywood Reporter calls Flash Forward "a strong companion to Lost." TV Guide concurs, saying, "It could be an obvious fill-in when Lost ends its run next year." And Entertainment Weekly calls it one of the season's "most notable projects." All the footage I saw in L.A., and everything I saw being filmed when I visited the set, totally lives up to the hype. This is going to be amazing.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Friday, March 13, 2009

Twentieth anniversary of the World Wide Web idea

I was talking with my friend Virginia O'Dine just a couple of days ago about coincidences (after she'd watched Supernatural Investigator, which I host on Vision TV; this week's topic -- people who had dreams that seemed to presage the events of 9/11 -- we both agreed could be chalked up to coincidences).

Well, how's this for a bunch of cool coincidences?

Right now, today, they're filming the pilot for a TV series based on my novel Flash Forward, which is set at CERN, the European particle-physics lab.

Right now, today, I received the very first copy of my new novel Wake, about the future of the World Wide Web, which got its start at CERN.

Right now, today, Tim Berners-Lee, the guy who invented the Web, is back at CERN for the celebration of the 20th anniversary of him drafting the idea for the Web.

And right now, today, he made this observation (as paraphrased by Scientific American Online), which is pretty much the starting point I took in writing Wake:
Berners-Lee pointed out that there are 100 billion Web pages today, roughly the same number of neurons in the human brain. The difference, he added, is that the number of pages grows as the Web ages, whereas the number of nerve cells shrinks as we get on in years.

Cool! :)

More on Sir Tim's CERN homecoming is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Thursday, March 12, 2009

Happy birthday, Courtney!


I can't remember if he's shooting Flash Forward today or not, but, if he is, I hope he took time out for a piece of cake (there's always delicious cake at the catered lunches): Courtney B. Vance, one of our stars (and one of the first two actors cast for the show) is celebrating his birthday today! Woot!

(That's Courtney and Executive Producer Jessika Borsiczky Goyer above in Los Angeles last week.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

FF's Sonya Walger nominated for Saturn Award


The amazing Sonya Walger, who plays the female lead in the upcoming Flash Forward TV series, based on my novel of the same name, has just been nominated for a Saturn Award by The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Horror Films, in the category "Best Guest Starring Role in a Television Series" for her work on Lost. The full list of nominees is here.

Congratulations, Sonya!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Monday, March 9, 2009

AdWords and me

I always find it interesting to see who is ponying up to use my name in the Google AdWords program (the thing that puts sponsored links to the right of Google search results). Chapters.ca and Amazon.ca have both bought "Robert Sawyer," which is fine by me, and my speakers bureau has sometimes bought my name in association with other words, such as "talk" or "keynote."

But now ABE.com has bought "sawyer flashforward" -- to steer people interested in the show to their used-book service. Folks, my novel Flash Forward is in print, and has been continuously since it was first published a decade ago. You can get new copies in paperback easily, you can buy it for the Kindle, and you can get it as an audiobook from Audbile.com, or you can buy an autographed copy directly from me: all those things put money in my pocket, and I'm very grateful for that. But if you buy a used copy through ABE.COM or any other source, well, I don't make a cent. Just so you know. :)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Sunday, March 8, 2009

Flashing back to the Flash Forward set


EXT. LOS ANGELES - DAY

ROBERT J. SAWYER, a bald, bespectacled novelist, and CAROLYN CLINK, his beautiful poet wife, survey the dozens of trucks, the hundreds of people milling about, and all the general chaos.

               CAROLYN
    Just think -- all of this
    because of you.

               ROB
    And it isn't even a crime
    scene!

As I said back on Thursday night, I was too tired then to blog about our first day on the set of Flash Forward, so let me play catch-up here.

We arrived at the Flash Forward base camp (where all the trailers were parked: director's trailer, actor's trailers, make-up trailers, etc. etc. etc.) at 8:00 a.m. and were met by executive producer Jessika Borsiczky Goyer's terrific assistant Katie Greisiger, and then a little later by Jessika.

(Jessika, by the way, is from Montreal: although this is literally as big as a Hollywood TV project can get in terms of scope and budget, we have a Canadian executive producer, a source novel by a Canadian, and four UK actors in leading roles).

We took a shuttle over to the actual shooting location (which was really quite close; I never took the shuttle again, and instead just walked back and forth). As soon as we got to the location, we were warmly greeted by David S. Goyer and Brannon Braga; David is directing and David and Brannon co-wrote the pilot script.

Brannon had to leave mid-morning to get over to the offices of 24, the other show he works on. But we had a great chat before he left; he is such a nice guy.

It was an incredible day to be on set: we had 152 extras and background players, making the chaos even more elaborate than usual. (I chatted with a bunch of the extras during the day; it was fascinating that most of them had no idea what project they were part of, or that "David" the director was, in fact, David S. Goyer of Batman Begins fame.)

We were shooting in an existing building, and David (and Rebecca Poulos, his incredible script supervisor) actually didn't watch from the room the filming was happening in, but from another nearby room, where monitors were set up to show what the cameras were getting. Carolyn and I were given headsets so we could listen in to what the microphones were actually recording, and we bopped between sitting in director's-style chairs behind David and standing discreetly out of shot watching the actual filming.

Everything was ramped up to the highest level: long dolly shots, Steadicam shots, etc. etc. The look is amazing.

It's said that a director sets the tone for the entire production off-camera as well as on. David is so approachable, and he has such a great smile, and he was funny and warm with the actors and crew; despite the incredibly long hours and the endless takes (our first day on the set was the ninth day of shooting), everyone seemed loose and relaxed and upbeat because David himself was all those thing.

Lunch was wonderful; David said he's used the same caterers (Mario's Catering) on other projects, and we could see why -- it was a banquet ... that had to be consumed in just 30 minutes, including time getting between the catering tents and the set! We sat with David and the person who is developing the official web site for the series.

After lunch, I was interviewed for the "Making of Flash Forward" featurette -- cool!

We met Jack Davenport, who plays Lloyd Simcoe; I'm a huge fan of the BBC sitcom Coupling, which starred Jack. He is much taller than I would have guessed, and very, very funny (not all people who play in comedies are actually witty without a script, but Jack really is). Today Jack had only 13 words of dialog -- which caused him to quip that at least for one day, he was the highest-paid-per-word actor in Hollywood. :)

I also had a nice chat with Sonya Walger (who had read and enjoyed my novel Flash Forward) and her agent, and I spent a lot of time with actor Zachary Knighton, who is a great guy (and I don't say that just because he's huge fan of my novel).

Near the end of the day, I was introduced to the charming and brilliant Nne Ebong, the vice-president of dramatic programming development for ABC Studios, and she immediately suggested putting me into one of the scenes, and so I got a little cameo as a man on a cell phone (and the super-nice Jennifer Dunn, who was Sonya Walger's stand-in and also a background player, coached me to hold the phone in my other hand, because I was covering my face with it in rehearsal).

Filming the scene I was part of delayed my departure from the set, so we ended up having a later dinner than planned with my terrific Hollywood agent Vince Gerardis and his associate Eli Kirschner; we ate at Luna Park, and I had a great steak. Of course, we're all thrilled with how Flash Forward is going, but we also spent time talking about various other projects ... ;)

All in all, it was a terrific first day on the set, and I am so glad I decided to come down to Los Angeles. I'm way busy with other things, and had been vacillating about whether I should really clear the days to take this trip but -- man! -- it totally, totally has been worth it. :)


Joseph Fiennes, one of the stars of Flash Forward, and Robert J. Sawyer, author of the novel upon which it is based.

MORE FROM THE FLASH FORWARD SET


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Saturday, March 7, 2009

Flash Forward on location

Today was outdoor location shooting for Flash Forward, the ABC TV series pilot based on my novel of the same name.

Carolyn and I were on hand from 7:45 a.m until noon, then had to head to LAX for the flight back to Toronto. We had an incredible three days in Los Angeles. Everybody treated us spectacularly well. As I said to Carolyn, the trip simply could not have gone better. :) This has been one of the peak experiences of my life.

I can't say enough about how kind executive producers David S. Goyer, Brannon Braga, and Jessika Borsiczky Goyer have been to Carolyn and me. David kept taking time out from directing to show us things (including the incredible matte paintings Kevin Blank has created for us, and the amazing "sizzle" reel David has put together of the highlights shot so far -- it looks like the trailer for the best damn movie you've ever seen); Jessika made sure we were introduced to everybody; and Brannon kept saying nice things and talking to me about writing. David, Jessika, and Brannon have known each other and worked together for years, but they made us feel like part of their family; it was wonderful.

I was frankly astonished (and thrilled!) by how much attention was paid to me by people, and how many had read or were reading my novel Flash Forward (series regulars Joseph Fiennes, Sonya Walger, and Zachary Knighton have all read it, special-effects wiz Kevin Blank had just started it on his Kindle, etc. etc.). Brannon quipped to David that he was envious because I work in publishing -- an industry in which writers are respected. :)

My biggest thanks, of course, go to my Hollywood agent Vince Gerardis of Created By (who was gently teasing me on Thursday night because four years ago we'd had another offer on the property from a major television player and I'd been reluctant to walk away from it even though Vince said we should, because he felt we could do much better. Now, of course, I'm thrilled that we did walk away).

The buzz from ABC and the industry press is incredibly positive about Flash Forward. It seems highly likely that we'll be picked up for the Fall 2009 season. We'll know for sure by May 17 -- and ABC will announce its fall line-up over two days on May 18 and 19.

A few more pictures:


David S. Goyer and Brannon Braga, authors of the pilot script based on the novel Flash Forward by Robert J. Sawyer


Robert J. Sawyer and Katie Greisiger, the amazing assistant to Jessika Goyer


Carolyn Clink and series star Joseph Fiennes, of Shakespeare in Love fame


Tony Stevens (stand-in for Joseph Fiennes), Jennifer Dunn (stand-in for Sonya Walger), and Sheila Louie (the on-set medic)


Carolyn Clink, Brannon Braga, and Robert J. Sawyer


Joseph Fiennes, John Cho, and Robert J. Sawyer -- it was a chilly morning in L.A., so we're all bundled up.


Robert J. Sawyer and Kevin Blank. Kevin was the special-effects genius on Lost and Cloverfield -- and now he's doing astonishing work on Flash Forward; I was stunned by the samples I was shown.

MORE FROM THE FLASH FORWARD SET


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Friday, March 6, 2009

More from the set of Flash Forward

Another fabulous day on the set of Flash Forward. We were there from about 7:30 a.m. to 7:15 p.m. (meaning we worked a much shorter day than just about everyone else!).

Had lunch with Sonya Walger, but can't show a picture of her because she was in costume all day. (For those trying to divine the secrets of Flash Forward, sorry, but none of the photos I'm posting are of the actors in costume, and none were taken on the sets.)

Sonya was definitely the hardest working actor today, with the most lines and the most scenes, and she was fabulous. She's incredibly intense when called for, and is absolutely riveting to watch. (How intense? Director David S. Goyer had to remind her at one point yesterday to blink ...) She's British, and has the most wonderful accent, but is playing an American, and it was fun watching her turn the accent on and off (or is that off and on?) when bouncing between playing her part and talking to others.

Zachary Knighton also did incredible work today. In fact, he and Sonya together did what is my favorite scene from the entire script -- and did it and did it and did, from angle after angle after angle ;). Zach's father, stepmother, and girlfriend visited the set today, and I showed them around, which was fun.

Also on hand today and yesterday was Nne Ebong, vice-president of dramatic program development for ABC, and I had a great time talking to her (and yesterday she was responsible for something incredibly cool happening for me -- about which more later).

Brannon Braga was on hand for part of yesterday morning, and it was great getting to chat with him again. He has been wonderfully warm and friendly and supportive, and had some very nice things to say about my Calculating God, which pleased me. He had to leave mid-morning, though, to get back to 24, the other show he works on. :)

John Cho and Courtney B. Vance didn't even have any scenes today, but they dropped by the set (and Jack Davenport came back, too, even though he wasn't filming today, either). Besides being in Flash Forward, John, of course, is Mr. Sulu in the new Star Trek film. He told me he'd just finally seen the whole thing, and thinks it really came out wonderfully.


Robert J. Sawyer, author of the novel Flash Forward, and series regular John Cho.


Series regular Courtney B. Vance and Executive Producer Jessika Borsiczky Goyer; Jessika was the first of the producers to read my novel Flash Forward; the project owes its existence to her enthusiasm for the book.


David S. Goyer who is director, co-author of the pilot script, and executive producer, with Kramer Morgenthau, the Director of Photography; between them, they've given Flash Forward an amazing look -- every frame looks like it's from a feature film, not a TV show; the footage is stunning.

MORE FROM THE FLASH FORWARD SET


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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On the set of Flash Forward

The pilot for the ABC TV series based on my novel Flash Forward is coming along fabulously.

We're having an absolute blast here in Los Angeles. We spent from 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. on the set today, and it was OMG amazing. I'm way too exhausted to write much now, but here are a few pictures:


Yes, it really is happening!


Robert J. Sawyer, author of the novel Flash Forward, and Jack Davenport, who plays Lloyd Simcoe, the novel's main character


Rob being interviewed for the Making of Flash Forward featurette


Author Robert J. Sawyer and actor Zachary Knighton


Author Robert J. Sawyer and director David S. Goyer

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Off to Los Angeles ...


... to watch the pilot for Flash Forward be filmed. W00t! It's really happening! :D

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Saturday, February 21, 2009

Is it Flash Forward or Flashforward?


Is the title of my book -- and the TV series based on it -- one word or two? I was asked that question in the comments section of this post, but since people keep wondering, I'm putting the answer in its own blog post, too:

It's complicated (sigh). I always intended the title to be one word, Flashforward, since it's a play on the word flashback, which is a single word.

But when designing the book cover, Tor's art department split it into two words on the cover and the spine (without anyone asking me if it was okay), but left it as one on the back cover, and the interior designer left it as one everywhere, too.

David S. Goyer, Brannon Braga and I all discussed this in L.A. back in 2007, and all agreed that the title should be one word logically, but people keep referencing it as two words, because that's what they see on the book cover, and that ended up being the spelling used for the TV series title.

I've given up the fight: I'm now referring to my book as Flash Forward -- two words. But it really was a decison the author, not the art department, should have made.

(For Pete's sake, "Flashforward" as as single word is only one letter longer than "Calculating" and just two letters longer than "Frameshift," both of which they managed to fit on a single line on other covers of mine ...)

More about the novel formerly known as Flashforward is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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Flash Forward filming starts today


Yup, today, Saturday, February 21, 2009, in Los Angeles, the ABC series pilot based on my novel Flash Forward begins shooting with David S. Goyer directing. Woot!

Carolyn and I aren't down there yet -- I've got a novel to finish that's due on Monday -- but we are going down in 12 days to watch them film the big scene in which the main character discovers that this crazy planet full of apes was Earth all along, and --

Well, actually, no -- and I can't tell you what is being filmed (shh! no spoilers!). But it's all very, very cool ... ;)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

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