Robert J. Sawyer

Hugo and Nebula Award-Winning Science Fiction Writer

Nice bit of fan mail

by Rob - May 11th, 2009

Got a nice bit of fan mail just now, in response to the news about the series order for Flash Forward. He says:

Here’s hoping someone will read the wonderful novel Wake and turn it into a movie as well. I enjoyed it immensely and can hardly stand waiting for its sequels. Amazing and interesting premise that’s wonderfully executed. It evoked such an emotional response I can hardly express how much I enjoyed it. Way to go.

Sweet!

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

More Ottawa Photos

by Rob - May 11th, 2009

My friend Stephanie Wilson in Ottawa sent me some lovely pictures she took at my launch party for Wake at the Clock Tower Pub on my birthday, Wednesday, April 29, 2009:


A trademark over-the-top RJS reading. :)


The wonderful folks at Perfect Books got me a birthday cake!


Stephanie Wilson (pictured with me) gave me a birthday present: a box of Girl Guide cookies — yum!

Photos copyright 2009 by Stephanie Wilson.

More photos from that night are here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Rob interviewed on Alamo AM

by Rob - May 10th, 2009


For eleven years now, Mike Shinabery, a radio broadcaster and journalist in Alamogordo, New Mexico, has been doing lengthy, meaty radio interviews with me — Mike does his research, knows his science, and is himself an SF fan.

Last month, on April 9, 2009, he had me on his morning show on KSRY AM 1230 for 40 minutes talking about my new novel Wake — my tenth time on his show!

You can listen to the whole thing right here. (Mike’s co-host is Jean Vallance.)

Mike Shinabery

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Rob returns to the Howard Gluss Radio Show

by Rob - May 10th, 2009


I’ll be the guest for half an hour this Tuesday night, May 12, 2009, on The Howard Gluss Radio Show, starting at 11:00 p.m. Eastern time (8:00 p.m. Pacific), talking about my novel Wake. The show is based in Los Angeles, but you can listen online anywhere in the world. :)

More info is here, and my previous appearnce on Dr. Gluss’s show is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Time and the Fiction of Robert J. Sawyer

by Rob - May 10th, 2009


On Thursday, March 19, 2009, Fiona Kelleghan of the University of Miami presented an excellent paper entitled Time and the Fiction of Robert J. Sawyer: Flash Forward to the End of an Era at the 30th annual International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts in Orlando, Florida.

You can listen to the whole thing right here (Prof. Kelleghan is introduced by Daniel Creed of Florida Atlantic University). Running time: about 15 minutes.

Abstract:

Time and the Fiction of Robert J. Sawyer: Flash Forward to the End of an Era

By Fiona Kelleghan
University of Miami

Robert J. Sawyer frequently bends time in his novels and short stories, and always in service of finding deep human truths or making profound philosophical points.

From exploring time dilation in his Aurora Award-winning novel Golden Fleece and the short stories “Relativity,” “Where the Heart Is,” and “The Shoulders of Giants” (featured in Hartwell & Cramer’s The Hard SF Renaissance) …

… to actual travel through time in the Seiun Award-winning End of an Era, the Hugo-nominated Starplex, and his short stories “If I’m Here, Imagine Where They Sent My Luggage,” “Just Like Old Times” (winner of both Canada’s top SF award and it stop mystery-fiction award), “You See But You Do Not Observe” (a Sherlock Holmes pastiche that won France’s Le Grand Prix de l’Imaginaire for year’s best foreign short story), and “On the Surface” (a sequel to H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine) …

… to figurative time travel as with the rolling back of ages in his latest novel, the Hugo nominated Rollback …

… to the Delphic glimpses of the future given to all of humanity in his Aurora Award-winning novel Flash Forward (and the ABC TV series pilot based on it) …

… to the sideways treks in time to parallel worlds in his Hugo Award-winning Hominids and its sequels and short stories such as “Iterations” and “Lost in the Mail,” few writers have more thoroughly explored the distorting lens of time displacement as a way of uncovering larger realities and providing penetrating insights into characters.

[The short stories not hyperlinked above are available from Fictionwise.com.]

Also available in audio form: Prof. Kelleghan’s 2008 ICFA paper “The Intimately Human and the Grandly Cosmic: Humor and the Sublime in the Works of Robert J. Sawyer.”

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

The Toronto Star on Wake and RJS

by Rob - May 10th, 2009


The Toronto Star — Canada’s largest circulation newspaper — has an article about Robert J. Sawyer and his novel Wake in the Sunday, May 10, 2009, edition; the article is by Philip K. Dick Award-finalist Minister Faust.

Faust says, in part:

Best known as the author of the Hugo Award-winning Hominids, Sawyer is Canada’s answer to near-future science-ponderer Michael Crichton. He’s also a pacifist, whose oeuvre is at odds with much of science fiction, supposedly the literature of big ideas but which so often descends to war-porn and genocidal wish-fulfilment.

Sawyer’s success proves that science fiction doesn’t have to be that way. Frequently against an unabashedly Canadian backdrop, Sawyer’s tales engage issues as diverse as the existence of God, Neanderthal ethics and techno-immortality. His career of delivering provocative novels, without murder as the key dramatic device, proves that the genre formerly known as the “scientific romance” is as relevant as ever, if not more.

The whole article is here.

Sawyer also appeared on Minister Faust’s Edmonton radio show recently; that audio interview is here.

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

John Klima could use your help

by Rob - May 9th, 2009

There’s nothing harder than being a freelancer in today’s publishing climate, and having a new child just makes it even more difficult. Check out John Klima’s blog.

(John is the editor of the Hugo Award-nominated fanzine Electric Velocipede and did the recent interview with me for the Tor.com website.)

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

Penguin Canada’s edition of Wake going into a second printing!

by Rob - May 9th, 2009


On Thursday, May 7, I was in at Penguin Group (Canada)’s offices for some meetings, and received the wonderful news from Don Robinson, Vice President of Sales, that just twenty-three days after the Canadian release of Wake, Penguin Canada is going back to press for a second hardcover printing. W00t!

Of course, Penguin has done a great job getting the book out there, but I also have to thank Canada’s independent booksellers, and the two chains — Chapters/Indigo and McNally Robinson (where I’m Author of the Month chain-wide for May) — who have all gotten behind the book.

Needless so say, I’m thrilled!

“Sawyer is one of the most successful Canadian writers ever. He has won himself an international readership by reinvigorating the traditions of hard science fiction, following the path of such writers as Isaac Asimov and Robert A. Heinlein in his bold speculations from pure science. Clashes between personalities and ideologies fuel [Wake‘s] plot, but they’re not what the book is about. It’s about how cool science is. Sawyer has marshalled a daunting quantity of fact and theory from across scientific disciplines and applied them to a contemporary landscape — with due regard to cultural and political differences, pop culture, history, economics, adolescent yearnings, personal ambition and human frailty. —National Post (Calgary)

“Sawyer paints a complete portrait of a blind teenage girl, and imagines in detail — from scratch — the inside of a new being. Almost alone among Canadian writers, he tackles the most fundamental questions of who we are and where we might be going — while illuminating where we are now.” —The Ottawa Citizen

“A fast-paced and suspenseful story full of surprises and humour.” —The Saskatoon StarPhoenix

“It’s refreshing to read a book so deliberately Canadian in a genre dominated by Americans, and it’s easy to see why Sawyer now routinely wins not only Canadian science fiction prizes but also international accolades. His fans won’t be disappointed, and readers picking up his work for the first time will get a good introduction to a writer with a remarkable backlist.” —Winnipeg Free Press

More about Wake

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

Podcast: Sawyer neurosciences talk at Penn

by Rob - May 9th, 2009


On Wednesday, May 6, 2009, Hugo and Nebula Award-winning science-fiction writer Robert J. Sawyer gave an invited 90-minute talk at the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience [pictured] at the University of Pennsylvania (“Penn”). Sawyer was the first science-fiction writer ever invited to speak at the Center.

Sawyer’s talk delved into the cognitive science, neuroscience, and other areas that informed the portrayal of a sentient World Wide Web in his 2009 novel Wake and the uploaded consciousnesses in his 2005 John W. Campbell Memorial Award-winning novel Mindscan.

SPOILER WARNING: His talk contains major spoilers for both books, giving away significant plot points; please do not listen to the talk until you’ve read these books. (However, he talks about them separately — first Wake, then Mindscan.)

The talk is here as an MP3 file.

“Thank you again for making the trip to Penn! It was wonderful to finally meet you, after enjoying so many of your books. Your talk exceeded my fondest hopes — it was so clear and interesting and provocative! — and the group adored it.”

Martha J. Farah, Ph.D.
Director, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience

“I enjoyed your talk immensely. It fit the bill perfectly in showing how excellent speculative hard science fiction can be informed by and inform those of us in the cognitive neurosciences.”

Anjan Chatterjee, M.D.
Professor of Neurology

Information on booking Robert J. Sawyer as a speaker is here.


Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

They like me! They really like me!

by Rob - May 9th, 2009

(To quote Sally Field, for the humor-impaired …)

So, Capricon — a major Chicago-area science-fiction convention — polled its attendees to see which Guests of Honor from their previousw 29 years they’d most like to have come back for the 30th year. I’m honored and thrilled to be one of those chosen. Capricon 30, a four-day con in February 2010, will have these author guests of honor:

  • Frederik Pohl
  • Spider & Jeanne Robinson
  • Robert J. Sawyer

Yay! (I was Author Guest of Honor at Capricon 17 in 1997.)

Meanwhile, they want me back in Nebraska! I’ll be Author Guest of Honor at OSFest 3, to be held in Omaha, Nebraska, July 23-25, 2010 (next year); Pierre and Sandy Pettinger, and other key members of Nebraska fandom, fondly remembered me being Guest of Honor at Andromeda 2 in Lincoln in 1995, and want me back. Cool!

(And, just for the record, both of these invitations came before the Flash Forward TV series was picked up.)

Visit The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
and WakeWatchWonder.com

You know you’ve really made it when …

by Rob - May 9th, 2009

… 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

Wake book trailer

by Rob - May 9th, 2009


Penguin Group (Canada) has produced a nifty 70-second book trailer for Robert J. Sawyer’s novel Wake.

You can watch the trailer here on YouTube, and learn more about the novel on Rob’s website and at Penguin’s new WakeWatchWonder.com site.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Flash Forward picked up for 13 episodes

by Rob - May 9th, 2009


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

Autographed copies of Wake in Kitchener-Waterloo

by Rob - May 8th, 2009

Wake is set in Kitcener-Waterloo, Ontario, and now you can get signed copies there, either at Words Worth Books in Waterloo, or the Chapters superstore on Gateway Blvd. in Kitchener, as well as the Chapters at the north end of Waterloo.

And don’t forget that I’m coming to Waterloo soon for a public event:

Reading & Signing
Waterloo Entertainment Centre
24 King Street North
Waterloo, Ontario
Thursday, May 21, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
Hosted by Words Worth Books
http://www.wordsworthbooks.com/
IMPORTANT NOTE: Admission is free if you buy Wake at the start of this event, or in advance from Words Worth Books; otherwise, admission is $10 to defray facilities rental. See details here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Pictures from the Ottawa Wake event

by Rob - May 8th, 2009

There was a wonderful book-launch party for Wake in my home town of Ottawa, Ontario, on April 29, 2009, which happened to be my birthday. Hayden and Liz Trenholm took these pictures of the event, which was held at the Clock Tower Pub:


As I blow out the candles on my birthday cake, Pat Cavan (far right) of Perfect Books looks on.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

WakeWatchWonder.com is now live!

by Rob - May 8th, 2009


Penguin Group (Canada) has created a gorgeous, Flash-content rich web site to promote my WWW trilogy (the novel Wake, and its forthcoming sequels, Watch and Wonder).

Check out WakeWatchWonder.com for a nifty book trailer, Wake wallpapers, FAQs, and much more. It’s a work-in-progress — Penguin will be tweaking, expanding, and updating the site continously — so comments are welcome!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

More Flash Forward promos coming?

by Rob - May 8th, 2009


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

Robert J. Sawyer, Philosopher?

by Rob - May 7th, 2009


Booklist: “Sawyer not only has an irresistibly engaging narrative voice but also a gift for confronting thorny philosophical conundrums. At every opportunity, he forces his readers to think while holding their attention with ingenious premises and superlative craftsmanship.”

The Canadian Press: “Sawyer’s novels are always part science and part philosophical exercise, raising questions of morality and ethics in the future that resonate in the present.”

Denver Rocky Mountain News: “Sawyer has quietly become one of our most important science-fiction writers, examining different philosophical and ethical problems that come with advancing technology.”

Entertainment Weekly: “Sawyer lucidly explores fascinating philosophical conundrums.”

Kitchener-Waterloo Record: “This is Sawyer at his best: compelling characters, an intriguing and involving plot, and deep philosophic themes backed by credible scientific reasoning.”

Publishers Weekly: “Sawyer’s writing vies for timelessness by plumbing eternal philosophical and ethical questions, albeit in a futuristic setting.”

Quill & Quire: “Sawyer’s strength as a science-fiction writer is the way he can synthesize complex scientific ideas in an accessible manner and extract philosophical meaning from them.”

Sacramento News & Review: “I have a new favorite SF writer. Sawyer commingles hard science (quantum mechanics, anthropology, genetics, evolution) with cultural and philosophical observations (violence, sex roles, law and justice systems, religion) in the sort of brain-teasing, curiosity-piquing fashion that I adore.”

Sacramento News & Review (again): “Like all great science fiction, Sawyer’s work ultimately stirs up philosophical questions.”

Susan Schneider, University of Pennsylvania, in Science Fiction and Philosophy (Wiley-Blackwell): “If you read science fiction writers like Stanislaw Lem, Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke and Robert Sawyer, you are already aware that some of the best science fiction tales are in fact long versions of philosophical thought experiments.”

SFFaudio: “Sawyer is a fantastic structural writer, a craftsman capable of laying out the ideas in just the right order. We get meaty philosophical thought experiments and thus pure HARD SF.”

SFRA Review: “Provides the reader with self-searching moral and philosophical speculation, as well as solidly grounded scientific theory that characterizes good hard-science science fiction.”

SF Signal: “[Sawyer’s work is] a great springboard for philosophical discussions on morality and ethics, man’s place in the universe, abortion, and more.”

SF Site: “When it comes to blending cutting-edge science with complex philosophical ruminations, there are few authors more talented than Robert J. Sawyer. Sawyer is one of those rare SF authors who is able to approach complex scientific concepts and humanize them with believable characters, rich dialogue and all too real moral and philosophical dilemmas. Sawyer’s work is a rich, intelligent and entertaining form of contemporary literature.”

SF Site (again): “Sawyer is one of a handful of Science Fiction authors working in the field today who is able to blend together a myriad of philosophical, moral, and even legal concepts, with futuristic extrapolations based on real scientific principles. In essence Sawyer’s writing does what the very best Hard Science Fiction should do: it uses complex technological concepts to show us what it means to be human. In short, in all of Sawyer’s vast body of work, the science — as entertaining, and thought provoking as it may be — is always a secondary consideration after his well crafted characters and careful study of humanity itself, and it is this purposeful balance that elevates Sawyer’s work from Science Fiction escapism into the realm of high literature. In Hard SF in particular it is difficult to create believable characters that the reader cannot help but sympathize with, but Sawyer manages to do it with a skill and clarity that most mainstream literary writers would envy.”

Henry Mietkiewicz in The Toronto Star: “Sawyer compels us to think in a concrete way about concepts that we usually dismiss as being too metaphysical to grapple with. As he is clearly aware, the essence of science fiction isn’t starships, robots or virtual reality, but a unique philosophical inquiry into the evolution of the human spirit.”

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Sacramento News & Review on Wake

by Rob - May 7th, 2009


Sacramento News & Review reviews Wake:

Sawyer’s compassionate writing lets us avoid the trap of assuming monstrosity in difference. As Caitlin and the consciousness of the Web learn to communicate, readers can easily begin to question what it is that makes us human. Like all great science fiction, Sawyer’s work ultimately stirs up philosophical questions, and Wake is no exception.

You can read the whole review, published in the May 7, 2009, edition, here.

And more about Wake is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Major Trek spoilers — but what witty banter!

by Rob - May 7th, 2009


Right after the press screening for J.J. Abrams’s new Star Trek movie last Saturday, Space: The Imagaintion Station producer Mark Askwith and I went out to lunch at Milestones with the great crew from Hardcore Nerdity, and we recorded our thoughts about the movie, which opens North America-wide in two days, on Friday, May 8. DON’T listen to the podcast until after you’ve seen the film — our comments contain major spoilers.

But I will say this: every one of us is a major fan of the original series, and we all totally loved this new film.

You can hear our thoughts here.

Left to right: Adrienne Kress, Robert J. Sawyer, Mark Askwith, Jonathan Llyr, Lesley Livingston, and Joe O’Brien. Background: NCC-1701 no bloody A, B … um, well, actually it is the A …:)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Toronto book launch for Wake: Photos

by Rob - May 6th, 2009


Above: Chris Szego and Aurora Simmons from Bakka-Phoenix Books selling copies of Wake at the launch.


Above: Robert J. Sawyer reading from Wake.


Above: Mark Askwith (producer for Space: The Imagination Station), who interviewed Rob on stage at the launch; Lesley Livingston, author of the YA fantasy novel Wonderous Strange from HarperCollins; and Robert J. Sawyer.


Above: The real Lee Amodeo, who appears as a rock-star character in Wake, with author and Robert J. Sawyer; Amodeo is chair of Toronto’s annual science-fiction convention Ad Astra.


Above: Debbie Gaudet (Senior Manager, Publicity for Penguin Canada), Chris Szego (Manger of Bakka-Phoenix Books), and Robert J. Sawyer.


Above: Robert J. Sawyer and fan Troy Perault, who had Rob’s autograph tattooed onto his leg after a previous event.

All photos by Carolyn Clink.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Quill Blog has photos of Toronto launch

by Rob - May 6th, 2009

Quill Blog — the blog of the Canadian publishing trade journal Quill & Quire — has some photos of the Toronto launch for my new novel Wake on Thursday, April 30, 2009 at the pub Dominion on Queen. Have a look.

(In the article, Quill Blog calls me, “Robert J. Sawyer — a.k.a. the Canadian author most likely to have his brain kept alive in a jar for centuries to come.”)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Rob lands on Planet S

by Rob - May 5th, 2009

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

"Are you a religious man yourself?"

by Rob - May 5th, 2009


A grade-12 student sent me an email today about my novels The Terminal Experiment and Calculating God (the former a Nebula Award winner; the latter a Hugo Award finalist), because she’s doing her final project for English class on them. She asked:

I don’t mean to ask anything personal, but are you a religious man yourself? Or do you tend to be more like Tom, in ‘Calculating God’, and not really believe in anything other than science? Or on the flip side, was this book a way for you to explain your reasoning to the idea that a supreme being must exist through Hollus’ character?

Here’s my response:

I’m not a religious person. It would take proof to convince me that souls, or God, exist — so I wrote books in which scientists found proof of those things to play with the notion of how skeptical people might react. I’m fascinated by the fact that many skeptics are as dogmatic in their anti-religious beliefs (nothing could convince them that they are wrong) as many religious people are dogmatic in their beliefs. I liked playing with the notion of whether skepticism/atheism was really a reasoned position, or simply another belief system that would endure regardless of the evidence, or lack thereof, for its veracity.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

New Scientist on "The Unknown Internet"

by Rob - May 4th, 2009


New Scientist just uploaded eight short articles about “The Unknown Internet,” including this one entitled “Could the net become self-aware?,” which speaks to the themes of my novel Wake.

In the article on self-awareness, Ben Goertzel, who appears in the acknowledgments of Wake, says, “The internet behaves a fair bit like a mind. It might already have a degree of consciousness.”

The articles also appear in the May 2, 2009, print edition of the magazine.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Charles Mohapel’s pictures of my Montreal event

by Rob - May 4th, 2009

Charles Mohapel — the great Canadian photographer of all things science fiction — came out to my event for Wake at Parragraphe Bookstore in Montreal on Tuesday, April 28, 2009, and took some wonderful pictures, including the ones below. Many thanks, Charles!







Photographs copyright 2009 by Charles Mohapel.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Wake book-review roundup

by Rob - May 4th, 2009


Roundup of reviews to date of the Robert J. Sawyer novel Wake (or WWW:Wake, as the title is styled on the US dustjacket):

“Extremely well written and complex making Tron look like pre-school, this is a terrific first tale in what looks like will be a great trilogy.” —Alternative-Worlds.com

Wake provides a refreshing intersect of science and real life, of consciousness and perception, of imagination and potential. Sawyer puts the science back in science fiction and does it with panache.” —Bitten by Books

“Sawyer’s take on theories about the origin of consciousness, generated within the framework of an engaging story, is fascinating, and his approach to machine consciousness and the Internet is surprisingly fresh.” —Booklist

“A very entertaining read. Sawyer has written a pretty fast paced novel with Wake. Deceptively so in fact. Although it does not slow the story down he has packed the text with references to developments in information technology, mathematics, physics, linguistics and a number of other fields. Parts of the novel read like Oliver Sacks writing science fiction.” —Bookspot Central

“While this is clearly a novel of big ideas, the author never neglects the individual characters. Caitlin, her parents, Dr. Kuroda, and even the kids at school all seem very realistic. Allowing us to follow Caitlin’s story from her point of view works perfectly. She’s a teenager, so she’s moody and very human; but she’s a very smart girl, applying knowledge to new situations and grasping abstract concepts with relative ease. She’s a great character, with flaws and a sense of humor.” —CA Reviews

“Sawyer continues to push the boundaries with his stories of the future made credible. His erudition, eclecticism, and masterly storytelling make this trilogy opener a choice selection.” —Library Journal

“Unforgettable. Impossible to put down.” —Nebula Award-winner Jack McDevitt

Wake is about as good as it gets when it comes to science fiction. In Caitlin, Sawyer has created a likable and sympathetic hero. She’s smart, sure, but also full of sass, which lends itself to some wildly entertaining reading. Sawyer’s combination of writing skill and computing background come together marvelously in this book. The characters are rich and realistic, while the ideas are fresh and fascinating.” —The Maine Edge, Bangor, Maine

“When I am asked what my favourite science fiction novel is, invariably the answer is: `The last one by Robert Sawyer.’ With the publication of Wake, Rollback must sadly make way for the new title holder. Wake is, in the words of its heroine, made out of awesome.” —McNally Robinson, Canada’s second-largest bookstore chain

Wake is a marvelous story [with] a convincing narrative from the AI perspective. What I like best about this novel is Sawyer’s casual dropping in of various bits of history that I know, and other bits of current fact that I haven’t paid attention to. Eye openers on Chinese politics and insights into research into communicating with chimpanzees make this novel an eclectic reading SF fan’s delight. Sawyer’s SF story of an Artificial Intelligence dawning in the World Wide Web has the emotional impact of Buffy fighting demons from another dimension.” —Jacqueline Lichtenberg in The Monthly Aspectarian

“Sawyer is one of the most successful Canadian writers ever. He has won himself an international readership by reinvigorating the traditions of hard science fiction, following the path of such writers as Isaac Asimov and Robert A. Heinlein in his bold speculations from pure science. Clashes between personalities and ideologies fuel [Wake‘s] plot, but they’re not what the book is about. It’s about how cool science is. Sawyer has marshalled a daunting quantity of fact and theory from across scientific disciplines and applied them to a contemporary landscape — with due regard to cultural and political differences, pop culture, history, economics, adolescent yearnings, personal ambition and human frailty. —National Post

“Sawyer paints a complete portrait of a blind teenage girl, and imagines in detail — from scratch — the inside of a new being. Almost alone among Canadian writers, he tackles the most fundamental questions of who we are and where we might be going — while illuminating where we are now.” —The Ottawa Citizen

“The wildly thought-provoking first installment of Sawyer’s WWW trilogy explores the origins and emergence of consciousness. The thematic diversity — and profundity — makes this one of Sawyer’s strongest works to date.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review, denoting a book of exceptional merit)

“A fast-paced and suspenseful story full of surprises and humour.” —The Saskatoon StarPhoenix

“Emotionally satisfying and intellectually stimulating. Along with William Gibson’s Neuromancer and Neal Stephenson’s Snow Crash, Robert J. Sawyer’s Wake presents a unique perspective on information technology. I eagerly await its sequels.” —SFFaudio

“A superb work of day-after-tomorrow science fiction; I enjoyed every page.” —Hugo Award-winner Allen Steele

“Once again, Robert J. Sawyer explores the intersection between big ideas and real people. Here the subject is consciousness and perception — who we are and how we see one another, both literally and figuratively. Thoughtful and engaging, and a great beginning to a fascinating trilogy.” —Hugo Award-winner Robert Charles Wilson

“It’s refreshing to read a book so deliberately Canadian in a genre dominated by Americans, and it’s easy to see why Sawyer now routinely wins not only Canadian science fiction prizes but also international accolades. His fans won’t be disappointed, and readers picking up his work for the first time will get a good introduction to a writer with a remarkable backlist.” —Winnipeg Free Press
 

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

All Screens Are Not Created Equal

by Rob - May 4th, 2009


My op-ed piece “All Screens Are Not Created Equal” — about computer use, multitasking, and attention deficit — is now on my website here.

It was first published in The Ottawa Citizen, the largest circulation newspaper in Canada’s capital city, on March 20, 2009.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

And if you don’t believe me about the new Star Trek film …

by Rob - May 4th, 2009

… see what my buddy (and Space: The Imagination personality) Jonathan Llyr has to say about it, over at Hardcore Nerdity.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Minister Faust interviews Robert J. Sawyer

by Rob - May 3rd, 2009


Minister Faust — one of Canada’s leading SF writers (author of Coyote Kings of the Space-Age Bachelor Pad from Del Rey), and a renowned Edmonton radio personality — interviews Robert J. Sawyer about Rob’s new novel Wake.

You can listen to the 14-minute interview, which was first heard on Edmonton’s CJSR Radio on April 24, 2009, right here.

Says Minister Faust in the introduction:

Robert J. Sawyer is a Canadian Michael Crichton, fascinated with how developments in science will affect present-day and day-after-tomorrow individuals and society. His breadth of comprehension of scientific ideas is astounding, and his deployment of that understanding in his fiction is always exciting, memorable, and debate-provoking.

Among the topics we discuss: the inclusiveness, and ethnic/cultural diversity, featured in my fiction; the challenge of writing a trilogy; my approach to high-level metaphors; and how I managed to capture the voice of a 15-year-old girl.

(And more about Wake is here.)

Update: Minister Faust also interviews Robert J. Sawyer in the 10 May 2009 Toronto Star.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site