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Contact: A Novel Paperback – February 26, 2019

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 6,092 ratings

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The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Cosmos and renowned astronomer Carl Sagan’s international bestseller about the discovery of an advanced civilization in the depths of space remains the “greatest adventure of all time” (Associated Press).

The future is here…in an adventure of cosmic dimension. When a signal is discovered that seems to come from far beyond our solar system, a multinational team of scientists decides to find the source. What follows is an eye-opening journey out to the stars to the most awesome encounter in human history. Who—or what—is out there? Why are they watching us? And what do they want with us?

One of the best science fiction novels about communication with extraterrestrial intelligent beings,
Contact is a “stunning and satisfying” (Los Angeles Times) classic.

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About the Author

Carl Sagan was Professor of Astronomy and Space Sciences and Director of the Laboratory for Planetary Studies at Cornell University. He played a leading role in the Mariner, Viking, and Voyager spacecraft expeditions, for which he received the NASA medals for Exceptional Scientific Achievement. Dr. Sagan received the Pulitzer Prize and the highest awards of both the National Academy of Sciences and the National Science Foundation for his contributions to science, literature, education, and the preservation of the environment. His book Cosmos was the bestselling science book ever published in the English language, and his bestselling novel, Contact, was turned into a major motion picture.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Contact CHAPTER 1 Transcendental Numbers
Little fly,

Thy summer’s play

My thoughtless hand

Has brushed away.

Am not I

A fly like thee?

Or art not thou

A man like me?

For I dance

And drink and sing,

Till some blind hand

Shall brush my wing.

—WILLIAM BLAKE Songs of Experience “The Fly,” Stanzas 1-3 (1795)

By human standards it could not possibly have been artificial: It was the size of a world. But it was so oddly and intricately shaped, so clearly intended for some complex purpose that it could only have been the expression of an idea. Gliding in polar orbit about the great blue-white star, it resembled some immense, imperfect polyhedron, encrusted with millions of bowl-shaped barnacles. Every bowl was aimed at a particular part of the sky. Every constellation was being attended to. The polyhedral world had been performing its enigmatic function for eons. It was very patient. It could afford to wait forever.

WHEN THEY pulled her out, she was not crying at all. Her tiny brow was wrinkled, and then her eyes grew wide. She looked at the bright lights, the white- and green-clad figures, the woman lying on the table below her. Somehow familiar sounds washed over her. On her face was an odd expression for a newborn—puzzlement perhaps.

•  •  •

When she was two years old, she would lift her hands over her head and say very sweetly, “Dada, up.” His friends expressed surprise. The baby was polite. “It’s not politeness,” her father told them. “She used to scream when she wanted to be picked up. So once I said to her, ‘Ellie, you don’t have to scream. Just say, “Daddy, up.” ’ Kids are smart. Right, Presh?”

So now she was up all right, at a giddy altitude, perched on her father’s shoulders and clutching his thinning hair. Life was better up here, far safer than crawling through a forest of legs. Somebody could step on you down there. You could get lost. She tightened her grip.

Leaving the monkeys, they turned a corner and came upon a great spindly-legged, long-necked dappled beast with tiny horns on its head. It towered over them. “Their necks are so long, the talk can’t get out,” her father said. She felt sorry for the poor creature, condemned to silence. But she also felt a joy in its existence, a delight that such wonders might be.

•  •  •

“Go ahead, Ellie,” her mother gently urged her. There was a lilt in the familiar voice. “Read it.” Her mother’s sister had not believed that Ellie, age three, could read. The nursery stories, the aunt was convinced, had been memorized. Now they were strolling down State Street on a brisk March day and had stopped before a store window. Inside, a burgundy-red stone was glistening in the sunlight. “Jeweler,” Ellie read slowly, pronouncing three syllables.

•  •  •

Guiltily, she let herself into the spare room. The old Motorola radio was on the shelf where she remembered it. It was very big and heavy and, hugging it to her chest, she almost dropped it. On the back were the words “Danger. Do Not Remove.” But she knew that if it wasn’t plugged in, there was no danger in it. With her tongue between her lips, she removed the screws and exposed the innards. As she had suspected, there were no tiny orchestras and miniature announcers quietly living out their small lives in anticipation of the moment when the toggle switch would be clicked to “on.” Instead there were beautiful glass tubes, a little like light bulbs. Some resembled the churches of Moscow she had seen pictured in a book. The prongs at their bases were perfectly designed for the receptacles they were fitted into. With the back off and the switch “on,” she plugged the set into a nearby wall socket. If she didn’t touch it, if she went nowhere near it, how could it hurt her?

After a few moments, tubes began to glow warmly, but no sound came. The radio was “broken,” and had been retired some years before in favor of a more modern variety. One tube was not glowing. She unplugged the set and pried the uncooperative tube out of its receptacle. There was a metallic square inside, attached to tiny wires. The electricity runs along the wires, she thought vaguely. But first it has to get into the tube. One of the prongs seemed bent, and she was able after a little work to straighten it. Reinserting the tube and plugging the set in again, she was delighted to see it begin to glow, and an ocean of static arose around her. Glancing toward the closed door with a start, she lowered the volume. She turned the dial marked “frequency,” and came upon a voice talking excitedly—as far as she could understand, about a Russian machine that was in the sky, endlessly circling the Earth. Endlessly, she thought. She turned the dial again, seeking other stations. After a while, fearful of being discovered, she unplugged the set, screwed the back on loosely, and with still more difficulty lifted the radio and placed it back on the shelf.

As she left the spare room, a little out of breath, her mother came upon her and she started once more.

“Is everything all right, Ellie?”

“Yes, Mom.”

She affected a casual air, but her heart was beating, her palms were sweating. She settled down in a favorite spot in the small backyard and, her knees drawn up to her chin, thought about the inside of the radio. Are all those tubes really necessary? What would happen if you removed them one at a time? Her father had once called them vacuum tubes. What was happening inside a vacuum tube? Was there really no air in there? How did the music of the orchestras and the voices of the announcers get in the radio? They liked to say, “On the air.” Was radio carried by the air? What happens inside the radio set when you change stations? What was “frequency”? Why do you have to plug it in for it to work? Could you make a kind of map showing how the electricity runs through the radio? Could you take it apart without hurting yourself? Could you put it back together again?

“Ellie, what have you been up to?” asked her mother, walking by with laundry for the clothesline.

“Nothing, Mom. Just thinking.”

•  •  •

In her tenth summer, she was taken on vacation to visit two cousins she detested at a cluster of cabins along a lake in the Northern Peninsula of Michigan. Why people who lived on a lake in Wisconsin would spend five hours driving all the way to a lake in Michigan was beyond her. Especially to see two mean and babyish boys. Only ten and eleven. Real jerks. How could her father, so sensitive to her in other respects, want her to play day in and day out with twerps? She spent the summer avoiding them.

One sultry moonless night after dinner she walked down alone to the wooden pier. A motorboat had just gone by, and her uncle’s rowboat tethered to the dock was softly bobbing in the starlit water. Apart from distant cicadas and an almost subliminal shout echoing across the lake, it was perfectly still. She looked up at the brilliant spangled sky and found her heart racing.

Without looking down, with only her outstretched hand to guide her, she found a soft patch of grass and laid herself down. The sky was blazing with stars. There were thousands of them, most twinkling, a few bright and steady. If you looked carefully you could see faint differences in color. That bright one there, wasn’t it bluish?

She felt again for the ground beneath her; it was solid, steady . . . reassuring. Cautiously she sat up and looked left and right, up and down the long reach of lakefront. She could see both sides of the water. The world only looks flat, she thought to herself. Really it’s round. This is all a big ball . . . turning in the middle of the sky . . . once a day. She tried to imagine it spinning, with millions of people glued to it, talking different languages, wearing funny clothes, all stuck to the same ball.

She stretched out again and tried to sense the spin. Maybe she could feel it just a little. Across the lake, a bright star was twinkling between the topmost branches. If you squinted your eyes you could make rays of light dance out of it. Squint a little more, and the rays would obediently change their length and shape. Was she just imagining it, or . . . the star was now definitely above the trees. Just a few minutes ago it had been poking in and out of the branches. Now it was higher, no doubt about it. That’s what they meant when they said a star was rising, she told herself. The Earth was turning in the other direction. At one end of the sky the stars were rising. That way was called East. At the other end of the sky, behind her, beyond the cabins, the stars were setting. That way was called West. Once every day the Earth would spin completely around, and the same stars would rise again in the same place.

But if something as big as the Earth turned once a day, it had to be moving ridiculously fast. Everyone she knew must be whirling at an unbelievable speed. She thought she could now actually feel the Earth turn—not just imagine it in her head, but really feel it in the pit of her stomach. It was like descending in a fast elevator. She craned her neck back further, so her field of view was uncontaminated by anything on Earth, until she could see nothing but black sky and bright stars. Gratifyingly, she was overtaken by the giddy sense that she had better clutch the clumps of grass on either side of her and hold on for dear life, or else fall up into the sky, her tiny tumbling body dwarfed by the huge darkened sphere below.

She actually cried out before she managed to stifle the scream with her wrist. That was how her cousins were able to find her. Scrambling down the slope, they discovered on her face an uncommon mix of embarrassment and surprise, which they readily assimilated, eager to find some small indiscretion to carry back and offer to her parents.

•  •  •

The book was better than the movie. For one thing, there was a lot more in it. And some of the pictures were awfully different from the movie. But in both, Pinocchio—a life-sized wooden boy who magically is roused to life—wore a kind of halter, and there seemed to be dowels in his joints. When Geppetto is just finishing the construction of Pinocchio, he turns his back on the puppet and is promptly sent flying by a well-placed kick. At that instant the carpenter’s friend arrives and asks him what he is doing sprawled on the floor. “I am teaching,” Geppetto replies with dignity, “the alphabet to the ants.”

This seemed to Ellie extremely witty, and she delighted in recounting it to her friends. But each time she quoted it there was an unspoken question lingering at the edge of her consciousness: Could you teach the alphabet to the ants? And would you want to? Down there with hundreds of scurrying insects who might crawl all over your skin, or even sting you? What could ants know, anyway?

•  •  •

Sometimes she would get up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom and find her father there in his pajama bottoms, his neck craned up, a kind of patrician disdain accompanying the shaving cream on his upper lip. “Hi, Presh,” he would say. It was short for “precious,” and she loved him to call her that. Why was he shaving at night, when no one would know if he had a beard? “Because”—he smiled—“your mother will know.” Years later, she discovered that she had understood this cheerful remark only incompletely. Her parents had been in love.

•  •  •

After school, she had ridden her bicycle to a little park on the lake. From a saddlebag she produced The Radio Amateur’s Handbook and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. After a moment’s consideration, she decided on the latter. Twain’s hero had been conked on the head and awakened in Arthurian England. Maybe it was all a dream or a delusion. But maybe it was real. Was it possible to travel backwards in time? Her chin on her knees, she scouted for a favorite passage. It was when Twain’s hero is first collected by a man dressed in armor who he takes to be an escapee from a local booby hatch. As they reach the crest of the hill they see a city laid out before them:

“ ‘Bridgeport?’ said I . . .

“ ‘Camelot,’ said he.”

She stared out into the blue lake, trying to imagine a city which could pass as both nineteenth-century Bridgeport and sixth-century Camelot, when her mother rushed up to her.

“I’ve looked for you everywhere. Why aren’t you where I can find you? Oh, Ellie,” she whispered, “something awful’s happened.”

•  •  •

In the seventh grade they were studying “pi.” It was a Greek letter that looked like the architecture at Stonehenge, in England: two vertical pillars with a crossbar at top—π. If you measured the circumference of a circle and then divided it by the diameter of the circle, that was pi. At home, Ellie took the top of a mayonnaise jar, wrapped a string around it, straightened the string out, and with a ruler measured the circle’s circumference. She did the same with the diameter, and by long division divided the one number by the other. She got 3.21. That seemed simple enough.

The next day the teacher, Mr. Weisbrod, said that π was about 22/7, about 3.1416. But actually, if you wanted to be exact, it was a decimal that went on and on forever without repeating the pattern of numbers. Forever, Ellie thought. She raised her hand. It was the beginning of the school year and she had not asked any questions in this class.

“How could anybody know that the decimals go on and on forever?”

“That’s just the way it is,” said the teacher with some asperity.

“But why? How do you know? How can you count decimals forever?”

“Miss Arroway”—he was consulting his class list—“this is a stupid question. You’re wasting the class’s time.”

No one had ever called Ellie stupid before, and she found herself bursting into tears. Billy Horstman, who sat next to her, gently reached out and placed his hand over hers. His father had recently been indicted for tampering with the odometers on the used cars he sold, so Billy was sensitive to public humiliation. Ellie ran out of the class sobbing.

After school she bicycled to the library at the nearby college to look through books on mathematics. As nearly as she could figure out from what she read, her question wasn’t all that stupid. According to the Bible, the ancient Hebrews had apparently thought that π was exactly equal to three. The Greeks and Romans, who knew lots of things about mathematics, had no idea that the digits in π went on forever without repeating. It was a fact that had been discovered only about 250 years ago. How was she expected to know if she couldn’t ask questions? But Mr. Weisbrod had been right about the first few digits. Pi wasn’t 3.21. Maybe the mayonnaise lid had been a little squashed, not a perfect circle. Or maybe she’d been sloppy in measuring the string. Even if she’d been much more careful, though, they couldn’t expect her to measure an infinite number of decimals.

There was another possibility, though. You could calculate pi as accurately as you wanted. If you knew something called calculus, you could prove formulas for π that would let you calculate it to as many decimals as you had time for. The book listed formulas for pi divided by four. Some of them she couldn’t understand at all. But there were some that dazzled her: π/4, the book said, was the same as 1 – 1/3 + 1/5 – 1/7 + . . ., with the fractions continuing on forever. Quickly she tried to work it out, adding and subtracting the fractions alternately. The sum would bounce from being bigger than π/4 to being smaller than π/4, but after a while you could see that this series of numbers was on a beeline for the right answer. You could never get there exactly, but you could get as close as you wanted if you were very patient. It seemed to her a miracle that the shape of every circle in the world was connected with this series of fractions. How could circles know about fractions? She was determined to learn calculus.

The book said something else: π was called a “transcendental” number. There was no equation with ordinary numbers in it that could give you π unless it was infinitely long. She had already taught herself a little algebra and understood what this meant. And π wasn’t the only transcendental number. In fact there was an infinity of transcendental numbers. More than that, there were infinitely more transcendental numbers than ordinary numbers, even though π was the only one of them she had ever heard of. In more ways than one, π was tied to infinity.

She had caught a glimpse of something majestic. Hiding between all the ordinary numbers was an infinity of transcendental numbers whose presence you would never have guessed unless you looked deeply into mathematics. Every now and then one of them, like π, would pop up unexpectedly in everyday life. But most of them—an infinite number of them, she reminded herself—were hiding, minding their own business, almost certainly unglimpsed by the irritable Mr. Weisbrod.

•  •  •

She saw through John Staughton from the first. How her mother could even contemplate marrying him—never mind that it was only two years after her father’s death—was an impenetrable mystery. He was nice enough looking, and he could pretend, when he put his mind to it, that he really cared about you. But he was a martinet. He made his students come over weekends to weed and garden at the new house they had moved into, and then made fun of them after they left. He told Ellie that she was just beginning high school and was not to look twice at any of his bright young men. He was puffed up with imaginary self-importance. She was sure that as a professor he secretly despised her dead father, who had been only a shopkeeper. Staughton had made it clear that an interest in radio and electronics was unseemly for a girl, that it would not catch her a husband, that understanding physics was for her a foolish and aberrational notion. “Pretentious,” he called it. She just didn’t have the ability. This was an objective fact that she might as well get used to. He was telling her this for her own good. She’d thank him for it in later life. He was, after all, an associate professor of physics. He knew what it took. These homilies would always infuriate her, even though she had never before—despite Staughton’s refusal to believe it—considered a career in science.

He was not a gentle man, as her father had been, and he had no idea what a sense of humor was. When anyone assumed that she was Staughton’s daughter, she would be outraged. Her mother and stepfather never suggested that she change her name to Staughton; they knew what her response would be.

Occasionally there was a little warmth in the man, as when, in her hospital room just after her tonsillectomy, he had brought her a splendid kaleidoscope.

“When are they going to do the operation,” she had asked, a little sleepily.

“They’ve already done it,” Staughton had answered. “You’re going to be fine.” She found it disquieting that whole blocks of time could be stolen without her knowledge, and blamed him. She knew at the time it was childish.

That her mother could truly love him was inconceivable. She must have remarried out of loneliness, out of weakness. She needed someone to take care of her. Ellie vowed she would never accept a position of dependence. Ellie’s father had died, her mother had grown distant, and Ellie felt herself exiled to the house of a tyrant. There was no one to call her Presh anymore.

She longed to escape.

“ ‘Bridgeport?’ said I.

“ ‘Camelot,’ said he.”

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Gallery Books; Reprint edition (February 26, 2019)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1501197983
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1501197987
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 1010L
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.31 x 0.9 x 8.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 6,092 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
6,092 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the storyline compelling, realistic, and great to experience. They also say the content is good food for thought, factual, and illustrated in spectacular video graphics. Readers describe the book as very enjoyable, beautiful, and detailed. They praise the writing as exceptional and well-written.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

95 customers mention "Literary merit"85 positive10 negative

Customers find the literary merit of the book tremendous, engaging, and well worth the journey. They also describe it as a classic that didn't disappoint.

"...The book was just as good.5 stars for a very enjoyable book.Sadly Carl Sagan passed away in 1996...." Read more

"A most enjoyable read that goes well with the motion picture." Read more

"...Pacing kind of sucked and full of too much extraneous stuff. Still, pretty classic." Read more

"What a wonderful read. Wish Carl were still around to write. This book inspires me to keep learning about what is possible out there...." Read more

73 customers mention "Content"67 positive6 negative

Customers find the book's content good for thought, with lots of science imbedded in the framework to make everything plausible. They also appreciate the beautiful use of mathematics, and say the book is an expansive experience with original and unexpected ideas. Readers also mention that the book allows for critique and belief in the possibility.

"...Carl was a master at this.This is excellent Sci Fi. Also some real Astronomy and some Radio Astronomy is used. The book reads very well...." Read more

"...It is an excellent read for all science fiction fans and especially those who like the works of Carl Sagan." Read more

"...when it came out and now decades later… it still has the power to make me wonder and ponder. Amazing" Read more

"...Smart and fun. I'd recommend it." Read more

42 customers mention "Writing and content"31 positive11 negative

Customers find the writing and content exceptional, revealing the wonder of the book. They also say the narrator is excellent, and the book is detailed. Customers also appreciate the great view of the world and reconciliation between science and beliefs.

"...I like how the prose is laden with all kinds of facts, which is of course absent in the movie...." Read more

"...accessible through a strong lead, interesting plot, and a kindly professorial voice. Smart and fun. I'd recommend it." Read more

"...Sagan has a incredible style that is very well thought out and scientific, yet explains it to the reader in such an easy to understand way that like..." Read more

"...The writing style of this is genuinely exhausting to read...." Read more

40 customers mention "Storyline"32 positive8 negative

Customers find the storyline compelling, well thought out, and original. They also appreciate the intelligent qualities and realistic portrayal of what would happen if we were contacted. Overall, customers say the book is a great read that speaks to them all.

"...Overall (4 stars) - An excellent story on the role of science in our present and future, made accessible through a strong lead, interesting plot,..." Read more

"...But there are other very pleasant and intelligent qualities in this book. After all it was written by a very respected scientist and science-writer...." Read more

"...Both are very human and speak to us all." Read more

"...This part of the story was not helpful to the book" Read more

6 customers mention "Enjoyment"6 positive0 negative

Customers find the stories in the book entertaining.

"...Smart and fun. I'd recommend it." Read more

"...The scientific discussions sound real. The book is also funny: "He was a considerate and inventive lover...." Read more

"...been superseded by knew knowledge, but still a good read and an entertaining story." Read more

"...One of the deepest stories that I have read and always entertaining." Read more

In order to read all the words on a single page you nearly have to crease over the rest of the book putting great strain on the binding
1 out of 5 stars

In order to read all the words on a single page you nearly have to crease over the rest of the book putting great strain on the binding

This is not a review of the content of the book but the item I received itself. This type of copy is very hard to read, by the end of it you will have a book with a broken binding. The inside margins are too tight. The book itself is at least an inch thick and the inside page margins are only about a quarter of an inch. In order to read all the words on a single page you nearly have to crease over the rest of the book putting great strain on the binding.The attached photo is the book folded open on a table. Spend more money don’t get the mass market paperback.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2010
Another great book by Carl Sagan. I expected a great book by the Pulitzer Prize winner author of Cosmos... Carl Sagan ( see my review 5 stars) and I was not disappointed.

As an amateur astronomer of 40 years I knew of the famous distinguished astronomer Carl Sagan. All of the basic astronomy used in this great Sci Fi I knew about but I know very little of Radio Astronomy. By reading this book I learned a few tidbits about Radio Astronomy. To me this book was fascinating.

We see the central character Ellie Arroway growing up and eventually getting a PHD and becoming a world class astronomer in charge of a huge radio telescope... project Argus. Dr. Arroway leads a team and finds an ET signal originating from near the star Vega beaming to Earth. Project Argus receives a signal of prime numbers and then the The ETs beam back a radio signal received from us of Hitler and the Olympic games in the late 30s. Embedded in the signal is a message of instructions for us to build a 2 trillion dollar machine but there is problems getting the "primer" message to understand it. Eventually we get the "primer" and build the machine in the US, Russia and Japan. 5 people are selected to go into the machine ( Dr. Arroway is one of them) and using wormhole technology on double black holes are.....that's enough I wont ruin the book for you. Just to say the famous 5 are threatened to not say what they discovered and let the world think the machine did not work. But it did....! At the end of the book we learn the final message.

Carl Sagan was a world class astronomer and scientist that also worked as part of the Viking Mars spacecraft team. One of the things I liked about Carl was his seemingly effortless way of making complex problems in astronomy and science understandable to the general public. That is a rare gift. Many times brilliant men/women can not write to the average laymen complex thoughts in a way for the less educated to understand. Carl was a master at this.

This is excellent Sci Fi. Also some real Astronomy and some Radio Astronomy is used. The book reads very well. A fast read. The characters are well established and there is good interaction. As a novice to Radio Astronomy it was great learning a few very, very basic tidbits of Radio Astronomy.

Also Contact was a major motion picture from Warner Brothers. I remember seeing the movie and liked it too. The book was just as good.5 stars for a very enjoyable book.

Sadly Carl Sagan passed away in 1996. The world misses a great astronomer, scientist and a great man. Even though he never knew of me I considered Carl Sagan a friend who I respected very much.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2024
A most enjoyable read that goes well with the motion picture.
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2024
Saw the movie a long time ago and thought it was ok. Great to get the greater depth of character here in the book. Pacing kind of sucked and full of too much extraneous stuff. Still, pretty classic.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2024
Although the movie Contact (1997) remains one of my favorites of all time, I have to confess that I like the book more. The way Sagan describes Arroway in the books and her ideas feels more enjoyable to me as a scientist. I like how the prose is laden with all kinds of facts, which is of course absent in the movie. It is an excellent read for all science fiction fans and especially those who like the works of Carl Sagan.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2024
What a wonderful read. Wish Carl were still around to write. This book inspires me to keep learning about what is possible out there. Some of what I’ve thought could only be fantasy is actually a lot closer to reality.
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2024
I read this when it came out and now decades later… it still has the power to make me wonder and ponder. Amazing
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Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2013
1) Plot (5 stars) - After spending a lifetime listening to the stars, one astronomer finally hears a message to build a machine. But should humanity build it? What will the machine do? Will it be friendly or hostile? The decision pulls all facets of our modern society to the table for a heated debate and the tension of their interplay and the final result was fascinating. Sometimes, however, I felt the pace was a bit slow.

2) Characters (4 stars) - Ellie is the brilliant scientist charging forward for the cause of the rational, while sometimes missing the subtleties of interpersonal relations or emotions. She's a romantic which puts her at odds with her fellow scientists, but also deeply analytical which puts her at odds with much of humanity. On top of it, she's a female in a male dominated profession which allows for sexual and gender conflict as well. I enjoyed riding along with her on this journey.

3) Theme (5 stars) - Are we alone in the universe? It's so immense that it seems almost mathematically impossible for us to be the only "intelligent" life form. But if so, why haven't we made contact? Is it a lack of technology on our side or theirs? A lack of interest? A time or space distance too large to hurdle? Or are we just too different to understand each other? This was the surface question of the book, but underlying it was the theme of faith vs. empirical rationality, and how we need both to dream and advance. A message which was summed up beautifully in the book's conclusion.

4) Voice (4 stars) - Sagan became famous for translating esoteric scientific principles into simple and engaging parlance for non-scientists, and this ability shines through in his prose. Through Sagan's eyes all the prosaic backdrop we take for granted--ants, stars, mathematic concepts--come alive with his curiosity and the teeming science behind them.

5) Setting (4 stars) - The book takes place in a variety of science facilities on Earth, and a bit in outer space. All were described well and I felt transported there.

6) Overall (4 stars) - An excellent story on the role of science in our present and future, made accessible through a strong lead, interesting plot, and a kindly professorial voice. Smart and fun. I'd recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2017
Conflicted on this book for following reasons:
* It is A LOT different than the movie - this is a good thing in that the book is very interesting even if you have seen the movie
* Much of the science discussed in the book is leading edge in today's world of astronomy - astonishing for a book written 30 years ago
* Sagan's view of Christianity seems to be that we are largely a bunch of extremists - so sad and so untrue of the Judeo-Christian people
* The book pictured as the events taking place at the end of the millennium (1999). Don't know what to say about that
* The heroine slept around a lot and Sagan didn't seem to see a problem. This part of the story was not helpful to the book
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Juan Carlos Martin
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente novela de ciencia ficcion de uno de los mejore divulgadores de los ultimos tiempos
Reviewed in Mexico on August 26, 2022
Con todo el sustento tecnico y cientifico que el que alguien como Sagan le aporta a una novela de esta naturaleza las cuestiones que plantea al termino de la novela siguen y seguiran siendo muy validas
arc_lite
5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr gut
Reviewed in Germany on October 17, 2023
Buch in einen sehr guten Zustand, schneller Versand, vielen Dank.
AQL
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite books
Reviewed in Canada on April 20, 2021
The subject is fascinating. I particularly love the questions that are conjectured by the author should we be contacted. And I love the answers even more. Much more thorough than the movie starring Jody Foster (another favorite). Maybe the book deserves a mini series like some of today’s shows. A 2 hour movie could not do this justice, the movie Contact is just an appetizer. Well written. Quite an expansive vocabulary. I was happy to read it on my iPad w/ Kindle App so I could highlight a word I didn’t know and get the meaning right away.
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Renato Morello
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutamente lindo!!
Reviewed in Brazil on September 7, 2018
A estória é um show. Em relação ao autor, qualquer apresentação é dispensável. Carl Sagan foi um cientista genial e que muito contribuiu para a divulgação da ciência, tendo influenciado milhares de pessoas, incluindo aquele que hoje dá sequência no seu trabalho de divulgação da ciência, o astrofísico americano Neil Degrasse Tyson (a propósito, não deixem de assistir à Série “Cosmos” apresentada por Tyson. Um show de ciência e conhecimento transmitidos de forma leve e compreensível). A estória do livro é linda. O autor conseguiu unir ciência com uma estória que é um verdadeiro thriller. Não dá vontade de parar de ler. É muito, muito legal. A estória é bem mais rica que a aquela contada no filme com Jodie Foster e Matthew McConaughey e tudo fica bem melhor explicado que no filme. Mas o filme também é excelente e foi por causa do filme que comprei o livro. É também uma mensagem clara de amor e da existência indubitável de Deus.
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Zarg the formidable
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Science Fiction
Reviewed in Japan on December 6, 2019
I came to this book after watching the film. It really is a great piece of fiction and is very believable. I’m sure it’s close to the truth of how things would be and that Sagan is indeed a visionary.
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