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Mindscan (Hardcover)

~ Robert J. Sawyer (Author) "There were perhaps a hundred people in the ballroom of Toronto's Fairmont Royal York Hotel, and at least half of them had only a short..." (more)
Key Phrases: piton gun, synthetic body, artificial body, Karen Bessarian, High Eden, Brian Hades (more...)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Jake Sullivan watched his father, suffering from a rare condition, collapse and linger in a vegetative state, and he's incredibly paranoid because he inherited that condition. When mindscanning technology becomes available, he has himself scanned, which involves dispatching his biological body to the moon and assuming an android body. In possession of everything the biological Jake Sullivan had on Earth, android Jake finds love with Karen, who has also been mindscanned. Meanwhile, biological Jake discovers there is finally another, brand-new cure for his condition. Moreover, Karen's son sues her, declaring that his mother is dead, and android Karen has no right to deprive him of his considerable inheritance. Biological Jake, unable to leave the moon because of the contract he signed, becomes steadily more unstable, until finally, in a fit of paranoia, he takes hostages. Sawyer's treatment of identity issues--of what copying consciousness may mean and how consciousness is defined--finds expression in a good story that is a new meditation on an old sf theme, the meaning of being human. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

Praise for Mindscan
"Sawyer's most ambitious work to date; a brilliant and innovative novel that positively sings with humor, insight, and depth." --SF Site
 
"Sawyer lucidly explores fascinating philosophical conundrums."
--Entertainment Weekly
"A tale involving courtroom drama, powerful human emotion and challenging SF mystery. Sawyer juggles it all with intelligence and far-reaching vision worthy
of Isaac Asimov." --Starlog
 
"With his customary flair for combining hard science with first-rate storytelling, Sawyer imagines a future of all-too-real possibilities." --Library Journal
 
"This tightly plotted hard-SF novel offers plenty of philosophical speculation on the ethics of bio-technology and the nature of consciousness."
--Publishers Weekly

"A delightful read that grips the reader with engaging characters and cosmic ideas." --Winnipeg Free Press
--This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; 1st edition (March 10, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765311070
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765311078
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.9 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #980,893 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Robert J. Sawyer
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21 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Copying consciousness courts confusion, April 17, 2005
By Stephen A. Haines (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)    (VINE VOICE)   
This book shows why Robert Sawyer is today's pre-eminent science fiction writer. Always keeping speculation in tight rein, he nevertheless exhibits a wide-ranging imagination. His stories are always a good read, yet filled with information. He understands the human condition, displaying that insight with a variety of characters. Even the protagonist-narrator isn't entirely predictable. Others, who seem understandable [but never a stereotype!], spring surprises. He builds the episodes of this story with finesse - no small feat given the characters are 400 thousand kilometres apart.

Jake Sullivan, scion of a Toronto brewery fortune, has a problem. The blood vessels in his brain might unexpectedly explode. It happened to his father during a family fight. The result isn't terminal. It leaves the victim in a vegetative state. Jake decides to take advantage of a new technology to bypass the threat. He'll have his mind scanned and his consciouness copied into an almost indestructible artificial body. Immortality, that quest so long followed by fragile humanity, may be imminent. His "shed skin", the original, flawed body, will be shipped to the far side of the Moon to live luxuriously until "natural causes" prevail. The relocation abandons a lonely dog, a confused girlfriend and a concerned mother.

As might be expected, a threat looms. Give a lawyer an opening and another courtroom drama enfolds. What says the law on two minds of one person? Sawyer has done courtroom scenes before in "Illegal Alien". He surpasses himself with this one as the concepts of consciousness are thoroughly explored by the contending sides. Sawyer is at his best in having characters explain philosophical or scientific stances. Thankfully, in this examination of determining who we are, Sawyer manages to shift the issue of the "soul" out of the hands of the clergy. His defender of that concept would seem inappropriate, but the character expresses the idea fervently.

The resolution of these issues is, amazingly, left for the reader. Sawyer has always avoided absolutes. He has his passions - the Toronto Blue Jays and enjoying Fate's gift of being Canadian, among others. While those are important and worthy of admiration and satisfaction, the issue of humanity in general looms significantly in his work. He is outstanding in dealing with controversies in a balanced narrative. And the story line itself will keep you reading to the end. A true "page-turner". [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating piece of speculative Sci-Fi, April 11, 2005
By Jeffrey J. Lyons (Pembroke, NH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Robert J. Sawyer's "Mindscan" tackles the human dream of immortality with a twist. Think for a moment what you would do if you could upload your mind, your very being, into a durable, android-like body. In Sawyer's futuristic world, the Immortex Company allows the wealthy to do that. However, your human body is shipped to the dark side of the moon to live out your natural life in luxury. When you die, your uploaded self can live on for an eternity back on earth.

Immortex doesn't bother with informing the uploaded copy that the real one has died. But due to a bizarre coincidence, the death of prominent writer Karen Bessarian (who uploaded her mind due to old age)is reported to her flesh and blood son, who didn't particular care for her uploaded form. He forces the matter into Probate Court for the reading of the will. The uploaded Karen says, "No way, I'm still alive" and the matter becomes what amounts to the trial of the 21st Century.

In the meantime Jake Sullivan uploads his mind because he had a rare, incurable disease. Wouldn't you know it? They find a cure and he demands to go back to Earth and continue his life but Immortex puts the kibosh on that idea.

Sawyer writes great Science Fiction and presents it in such a way that it sounds almost plausible. His characters are real and believable. His plots move along smoothly and are easy to read. The trial scene is gripping. It's no wonder that he has won Hugo's and Aurora's and has been nominated for Nebulas. "Mindscan," which is actually an embellished version of his Analog short story "Shed Skin," fits right into the award-winning category. Highly recommended.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What if ... ?, June 3, 2005
By Jonathan A. Turner (Nashua, NH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)    (VINE VOICE)   
Robert J. Sawyer returns to his most typical format: a novel that digs into the human consequences of a plausible technological innovation. And very good it is! _Mindscan_ is SF in the classic mode of Asimov, Heinlein, early Niven, and those guys--a thorough and involving speculation, a good story, and a novel that will get you to ask some interesting questions. The setup has been used before (Greg Egan, for instance, is a recent practitioner), but Sawyer gives us a much better look at how real people might really feel than any other example I've seen.

The best part of _Mindscan_ is its fair-minded and articulate presentation of both sides of the issue. (This almost counts as a Sawyer trademark; other authors should take note.) This is a great technique in a what-if novel. It brings you, the reader, into the story, and makes you wonder: What do I believe? Would it really work that way? Is that a valid argument? And, most fundamentally, what would *I* do?

If _Mindscan_ has a weakness--or, at least, a lack of strength--it's in the resolution. It's not that it's badly done; a lesser writer, for instance, would introduce a technological fix that makes everything come out happy, and Sawyer doesn't do that. However, the ending neither (a) resolves the questions raised in the book, nor (b) demonstrates that they're fundamentally unresolvable. Instead, the characters are allowed to postpone dealing with them. They avoid the issues, instead of either deciding them or coming into conflict over them. After such a strong set-up, I'd have liked a more thought-provoking climax.

There *is* a little bit of a surprise ending. However, it concerns a subplot which is a minor contributor to the rest of the book. It would have been stronger if the subplot were either strengthened and integrated with the main story, or excised entirely. It's certainly not the case that the book is too long! (Sawyer has tried to do a little too much with his books before now. His _Frameshift_, for instance, is a very fine novel, but it has about one idea too many wedged into it.)

All the same, that still leaves _Mindscan_ as very good science fiction. Sawyer won some awards for his recent "Neanderthal" trilogy. I don't think that's his best work; the contrast between the (good) Neanderthals and (bad) us is too black-and-white. _Mindscan_, on the other hand, really does merit some awards, particularly compared to most of what shows up on the ballots. This is the stuff that gets 13-year-olds reading SF in the first place, but written with a fully adult sensibility. We need more of it.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Great idea, poor execution. Author not as clever as he thinks he is.
Mindscan has a great idea at its core in exploring the Philip K Dick theme of "What it means to be human" in the context of copying one's mind to an android and then discussing... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Computer Geek

3.0 out of 5 stars Does Sawyer hate the U.S.?
I enjoyed this book and I like the author's easy writing style. Before I read this book, I had purchased a short audiobook (47 minutes) from iTunes by the same author called,... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Kwisatz Haderach

5.0 out of 5 stars A Thoughtful Future
MINDSCAN (published April 2005) is the third SF book I have read by Robert J. Sawyer. The others, ROLLBACK (2007) and WWW: WAKE (2009) I gave four stars out of five to - MINDSCAN... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Gary Shea

5.0 out of 5 stars An enthralling existential drama
This book is awesome, at par with Philip K. Dick weirdest novels. Jake Sullivan's man's soul is divided: an uploaded consciousness inhabits an artificial body, whilst the... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Ventura Angelo

4.0 out of 5 stars Strong storyline ... Average Characters
The strengths of Sawyer's novels have been the combination of strong, science fiction storylines coupled with complex characters. Read more
Published 17 months ago by A. Keith Parker

1.0 out of 5 stars boring & banal
i bailed on this turkey after 80 pages. the writing is dull & unimaginative. a book about copying & downloading the human personality promises interesting specualations about the... Read more
Published on June 9, 2007 by zed mizar

5.0 out of 5 stars Couldn't put it down
Wow. I couldn't put this book down until I finished it. This is an excellent SciFi novel. Smooth as silk plotting and prose. Read more
Published on April 24, 2007 by David Keith

2.0 out of 5 stars Interesting ideas dealt with unconvincingly, plus flat characters
Mindscan is another of Robert J. Sawyer's award winners -- rather inexplicably, to my mind, it won the John W. Campbell Award for Best Novel. Read more
Published on January 29, 2007 by Richard R. Horton

5.0 out of 5 stars A Meeting of Minds
Mindscan (2005) is a stand-alone SF novel. Yet it represents an ongoing theme in the author's works (see The Terminal Experiment (1995) and Factoring Humanity (1998))... Read more
Published on December 22, 2006 by Arthur W. Jordin

1.0 out of 5 stars Liberal Political/Scientific Junker
MINDSCAN(2005) starts off slow, and then hits a brick wall when the ultra-liberal politics and science takes over. Read more
Published on December 5, 2006 by Stewart Teaze

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