3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Competently executed; indifferent result, May 31, 2000
While John Barnes has written a number of simply outstanding books (Mother of Storms, One for the Morning Glory), this Pohl-esque entry into the alternate worlds genre isn't one of them.
Finity gets off to a good start. The (first-person) narrator speaks in stilted, self-centered prose like, perhaps, a character from a R.A. Lafferty novel. It becomes apparent, after a while, that he inhabits a world that seems to have a changing past. Not only that but this changing past seems to be different for everyone. And then there is the matter of the United States having gone missing.
It's an interesting premise until it turns into a road trip. Then the story begins leaking steam. One of the characters turns out to be a red herring. (Or something very much like a red herring.) People you've just begun to know turn out to be expendable or not around for all that long for other reasons.
The mess is polished off with a couple of dream sequences that might have been adapted from the rendezvous of Picard and Kirk (well, not really, but ...). Quirks of physics and mathematics explain everything away.
Overall, underwhelming. Not a bad book to be stuck on an airplane with (which is where I read most of it) but there's better reading to be had. Much of it, in fact, with Barnes's own name on it!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
parallel to a good read, August 2, 2003
Somewhere out there in a a parallel world a version of me enjoyed a better version of this book - one in which interesting characters cleverly outwit sinister adversaries without resorting to the scientific version of "it was all a dream". To be fair - the story started well, has some nice ideas, but doesn't go anywhere. Perhaps like the citizens of America it should have sought a happier future.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Parallel Worlds and Mind-Boggling Physics..., December 11, 2001
The notion of parallel worlds is not one that science fiction fans find hard to digest. In Barnes' "Finity," we find ourselves on a world where the Nazi's won WW-II, America fell, and communities of "Expat" Americans live elsewhere.
Enter Lyle, the main character of the story, an expat professor, whose life is about to take a turn for the... parallel.
Barnes' style is great, and the plot is replete with substance and fantastic ideas. Lyle watches in total confusion as his wife seems to transform from the woman he loves to a trained military soldier - in the blink of an eye. Likewise, the entirety of his world seems to start functioning this way: people are of one sort one second, then change to have different memories from what might be a parallel universe the next.
As Lyle is hired by a mysterious organization to attempt to unravel this confusing situation, things get even more confusing: no matter who they interview, no one seems to come from a world where America still stands. And so, the terrified professor and a team of remarkable characters head off for just that place: what is there? I won't ruin it - refuse to ruin it.
Now, all that said, the quantum physics in this book was a tad overwhelming for the amateur such as myself. I had to read passages a few times to wrap my head around the explanations of what was happening (when, to be honest, a 'dumbed-down' version would have sufficed in my mind). So, the novel has a bit of "work" to it: this is not brain-candy SF, it's SF you'll have to think, learn, and process.
Lyle is a lackluster hero, a normal joe-average, and that can also get a little frustrating at points, especially since everyone else seems so qualified and important, and you start to wonder why anyone wanted him on this mission in the first place.
Despite those two failings, the book was quite good, and I enjoyed it. I'm not sure I'll be re-reading it anytime soon (and if I do, I'll skip the physics lessons), but it was defitely a worthwhile read.
'Nathan
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