Review of "Time Travel in Einstein's Universe" on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
What ages would I recommend it too? – Fourteen and up.
Length? – Several days to read.
Characters? – Not really.
Setting? – Semi real world. Science on the scale of the largest and smallest particles.
Written approximately? – 2001.
Does the story leave questions in the readers mind? – Reading to read more theories.
Any issues the author (or a more recent publisher) should cover? No.
Short storyline: The first chapter was really good and covers many types of media (books and movies) that give examples of time travel. The second chapter talks about the possibility of time travel to the future. The third chapter pretty much decided that time travel to the past, other than within a person's own lifetime is nigh impossible, and even then, the likelihood of time travel to your own past is almost impossible. There is a lot of repetition. Some sentences are repeated …
What ages would I recommend it too? – Fourteen and up.
Length? – Several days to read.
Characters? – Not really.
Setting? – Semi real world. Science on the scale of the largest and smallest particles.
Written approximately? – 2001.
Does the story leave questions in the readers mind? – Reading to read more theories.
Any issues the author (or a more recent publisher) should cover? No.
Short storyline: The first chapter was really good and covers many types of media (books and movies) that give examples of time travel. The second chapter talks about the possibility of time travel to the future. The third chapter pretty much decided that time travel to the past, other than within a person's own lifetime is nigh impossible, and even then, the likelihood of time travel to your own past is almost impossible. There is a lot of repetition. Some sentences are repeated dozens of times.
The last chapter spouts about a future prediction theory. It could have been summed up quite well in three pages. Basically, if it has happened, it will happen. The numbers it comes up with are so unrealistic, that it's unbelievable. No individual human could live 1,250 years and still be healthy. In some ways, this theory might be useful for giant calculations - like predicting the demise of the universe. And yet, even then, the numbers seem too large to be meaningful, and are often contradicted by other science (much as theories often are).
Notes for the reader: Great for a collection of literary resources for time travel to both the past and the future.