I'm, ah, rather embarrassed to admit this, but I've never read that particular book, though I have heard of it.December wrote:On a slightly off-topic note, Knives, I'm wondering if you found the time travel in The Time Traveller's Wife well done, or still paradoxical and frustrating (certainly it was much more painstakingly thought out than Stephenie's).
Wait, I can't believe I'm asking this. I HATE getting snarled up in time travel paradoxes.... Don't answer that!!! Back to Edward, Bella and Fate everyone please.... (*grin*)
Twilight Universe General Philosophical Musings
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Re: Twilight Universe General Philosophical Musings
Openhome wrote:Knives, I believe that..
wait for it...
you are right.
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Re: Twilight Universe General Philosophical Musings
Embarrassment not necessary (at least in my book): I liked it perfectly well, and thought its narrative strategy -- and engagement with the emotional implications of time travel -- interesting, but I didn't personally consider the book a Must Read. But if Time Travel stories interest you, it would certainly give you something to think about! And it certainly presents the conflict between our sense that we make choices freely, and the fact that what is (as yet) undecided will some day have become immutable fact (and is from that future perspective, already fated,) very vividly.
“When did you ever promise to kill yourself falling out of Charlie’s tree?”
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Re: Twilight Universe General Philosophical Musings
Y'know, I once had a most enlightening debate on that subject with a professor of Quantum Physics. I must track the gentleman down again...December wrote:Embarrassment not necessary (at least in my book): I liked it perfectly well, and thought its narrative strategy -- and engagement with the emotional implications of time travel -- interesting, but I didn't personally consider the book a Must Read. But if Time Travel stories interest you, it would certainly give you something to think about! And it certainly presents the conflict between our sense that we make choices freely, and the fact that what is (as yet) undecided will some day have become immutable fact (and is from that future perspective, already fated,) very vividly.
Openhome wrote:Knives, I believe that..
wait for it...
you are right.