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Eater [Hardcover]

Gregory Benford (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 2, 2000

Few writers possess Gregory Benford's extraordinary array of talents. As a scientist, he is intimately involved in the latest advances in experimental and theoretical physics. His scientific work has earned him international honors, including election to the Royal Astronomical Society. Yet Benford is also an awardwinning novelist, remarkable for communicating cutting-edge science with crystal clarity in stories that probe the human heart as well as the farthest reaches of space and time. Now Benford brings us a near future in which humanity's vaunted intellect and technology, its courage and imagination, will be put to the ultimate test against a godlike being billions of years old.

Dr. Benjamin Knowlton heads the High Energy Astrophysics (enter, a prestigious research facility devoted to the interpretation of astronomical data. He stands at the apex of his profession, respected by his peers and involved in research with the potential to revolutionize our understanding of the universe. But Benjamin has no cause to celebrate. His beloved wife and colleague, Charming, an ex-astronaut turned astronomer, is dying of cancer. She has only a few months to live.

Then an anomalous signal from a remote probe alerts Benjamin to the presence of a wandering black hole beyond the orbit of Pluto. Though its trajectory will take it through the solar system, the singularity poses no threat to Earth-on the contrary, it may hold answers to the most fundamental questions of physics. But when an encoded message is received from the block hole, excitement turns to astonishment and apprehension. The thing is alive, intelligent, its mind residing in powerfully fluctuating fields of electromagnetic energies that radiate outward from its infinitely dense core. And it wants a (loser look at Earth...and its inhabitants.

The entity -- dubbed the Eater for its habit of devouring everything in its path--proves eager to share its vast knowledge, accumulated in the course of explorations that began long before life arose on Earth. In exchange, it seeks to learn about human art, culture, and science. The world is charmed by the seemingly beneficent alien. Even Channing is infused with fresh strength and purpose.

But gradually a terrifying truth about the singularity emerges -- a truth almost too awful to comprehend. Now, as the world waits, Channing volunteers to undertake a desperate gamble: a one-to-one confrontation with the Eater.Astrophysicist Benjamin Knowlton heads up a large research center while caring for his terminally ill ex-astronaut wife, Channing. He and his team discover a black hole moving quickly through space, devouring everything in its path, and name it, the "Eater." There's no danger -- its orbit will miss Earth with room to spare. Then the Eater speaks. It is a life form, an intelligence built into an astrophysical field. It seems benign enough: interested in human art, culture, and intelligence, and eager to share its vast knowledge of many previously unknown alien cultures. But gradually, humans discover the terrifying truth: the Eater is lonely for companionship on its interstellar journeys, and plans to "upload" the personalities of Earth -- by destroying the planet and their physical beings. Channing volunteers to sacrifice the little time she has left for a magnetic immortality, to become part of the creature and, perhaps, defeat it.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Benford (The Martian Race), a physics professor at UC-Irvine and a Nebula winner for his novel Timescape, is one of the leading exponents of hard SFAwhich, no matter how fantastic it might seem, never violates established scientific laws. His newest novel takes one of the oldest SF plotsAfirst contactAand spruces it up with great success using the latest developments in astronomy and, in particular, new information on black holes. In the early 21st century, astronomers observe what appears to be a distant gamma-ray burster, a black hole swallowing another star many light years away. The data is troubling because a second burster occurs only 13 h ours later, which, given the immense distance between stars, should be impossible. Eventually, the astronomers realize that the black hole, rather than being incredibly distant, is on the edge of our solar system, and moving our way at considerable speed. Stranger still, it appears to be under intelligent guidance, or, perhaps, to be intelligent itself. One of Benford's specialties is presenting science the way it's really done, and this is clearly the case here. His three astronomer-protagonistsABenjamin Knowlton; his cancer-stricken wife, Channing; and the British Astronomer Royal, Kingsley Dart, whom Benford has partly based on Freeman DysonAare nicely drawn and highly believable. His alien is, well, incredibly alien and endlessly fascinating. Less successful are Benford's government officials, who can come across as caricaturesAbut this is a minor fault. Full of astronomical pyrotechnics and the kind of intellectual verbal fencing that seems to go along with creative scientific thinking, Benford's latest should delight any serious reader of SF. Agent, Ralph Vicinanza.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

YA-Long before there was time, a black hole became a wandering entity, feeding on asteroids, planets, and remnants of the Big Bang. Eventually, it began engulfing ancient civilizations in its never-ending roaming across the expanse of time and space. When it reaches the edge of Earth's solar system, three scientists, Benjamin Knowlton, his wife Channing, and their friend and colleague Kingsley Dart, take on the fight to prevent the black hole, named Eater, from annihilating the Earth. Basing the foundation of the story on scientific knowledge in the fields of physics and astronomy, Benford gives enough background in both areas to elucidate concepts without overstating the obvious. He develops the main characters as the story unfolds, paralleling their personal changes, their shared history, and their heroic interactions with the increasing malevolence of the Eater. Deftly weaving scientific procedure around an exciting plot of adventure and destruction, and inserting the interpersonal relationships of three intense personalities, Benford creates scientific fiction that sounds very real.
Pam Johnson, Fairfax County Public Library, VA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Voyager; 1st edition (May 2, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380974363
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380974368
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,183,901 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

26 Reviews
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4 star:
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 (5)
2 star:
 (10)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (26 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Great science, but disappointing old-school plot and characters, April 25, 2006
This review is from: Eater (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the first of Benford's I've read, and I was disappointed. The idea of the intelligent black hole, while not totally novel, was fascinating, and supported by utterly convincing fact-based detail about ergospheres, magnetically controlled plasma, Alfven waves, and the Kuiper belt. But when it moves beyond his area of expertise, astrophysics and the bureaucracy of big science, the story suddenly seems sophomoric.

This is basically an old-school 1940s pulp/Trek/Independence Day style plot. I found quite a few implausibilities in the alien's history, the reaction of Earth's population to it, the politics, and the ability of scientists to outwit the US security apparatus. The first 3/4 is very slow, although it gives a good picture of what it's like to be a high pressure astronomical researcher. The characters seem cliche - the superior, cultured Brit, the spunky female astronaut. The love story is nicely mature, but still slow and kind of wooden.

The biggest fallacy and irritant in the book was it's rah-rah anthropocentrism, with good ol' American homo sapiens managing to do what thousands of other civilizations couldn't - kick the alien's [...].

There were also a few disparaging remarks about Carl Sagan, whose alien contact novel 'Contact' is light years better than this one - in my opinion the best. If you want to learn about plasmas and scientist's rivalries, read this book. If you want a convincing alien contact story, read Sagan.





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11 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars another great one, May 2, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Eater (Hardcover)
well, the great one does it again. here's another example that great SF has not died. this book delves into the actions of scientists and the world against an incredible extraterrestrial threat which seems to be able to destroy the world as we know it. definately worth reading
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25 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Eater: Been there done that., June 12, 2000
This review is from: Eater (Hardcover)
Had this novel been the first of Benford's which I'd read, I admit I'd be pretty impressed. But knowing the works of which Benford is capable, this novel was quite a disappointment. Readers who are impressed by his examination of the scientific process may wish to look at his previous novel, Cosm, which was essentially the same thing. This novel contained two-dimensional characters, whose main duty seemed to be spewing out tiny little jokes about science and bureaucracy. Rather than coming up with an original work, Benford seems to have rehashed many of his previous novels: the probe approaching Earth in In the Ocean of Night, the examination of the possible nature of black holes in the final two novels of the Galactic Centre Cycle, the look at scientific methods and bureaucracy in Cosm--even the line, "The thing about aliens is, they're alien," had been done to death in his six-book Cycle, and was repeated here ad nauseum. From a writer of Benford's intelligence and talent, I expected much more originality and depth. This is his first work in which I was disappointed.
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First Sentence:
It began quietly. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
accretion disk, magnetic structure
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
White House, United States, Mauna Kea, Gang of Four, Secretary of State, Astronomer Royal, Victoria Martinez, Amy Major, Big Screen Room, Semiotics Group, Long Eye, High Energy Astrophysics Center, Kingsley Dart, Security Council, Astronomical Units, Eater of All Things, Executive Committee, Very Large Array
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