Einstein's dreams

English language

Published Jan. 2, 1994

ISBN:
978-0-446-67011-1
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(35 reviews)

Einstein's Dreams is a 1992 novel by Alan Lightman that was an international bestseller and has been translated into thirty languages. It was runner up for the 1994 L. L. Winship/PEN New England Award. Einstein's Dreams was also the March 1998 selection for National Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation" Book Club. The novel has been used in numerous colleges and universities, in many cases for university-wide adoptions in "common-book" programs. New York Times book critic Michiko Kakutani wrote about the book: "As in Calvino's work, the fantastical elements of the stories are grounded in precise, crystalline prose. As in Jorge Luis Borges's ficciones, carefully observed particulars open out, like doors in an advent calendar, to disclose a magical, metaphysical realm beyond."Einstein's Dreams was first adapted for the stage by David Gardiner and Ralf Remshardt and performed at the University of Florida in 1996. An off-off-Broadway production of this stage …

12 editions

Review of "Einstein's dreams" on 'Goodreads'

 [a:Alan Lightman|8933|Alan Lightman|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1550028004p2/8933.jpg]'s [b:Einstein's Dreams|14376|Einstein's Dreams|Alan Lightman|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1386925066l/14376.SY75.jpg|1820798] is, like the title implies, dreamlike. But don't worry if you don't feel like you're at Einstein's level when it comes to exploring the ideas he came up with in the early part of the twentieth century. This is an exploration of time, but not in a technical sense. Einstein would do what he called "thought experiments" from the time he was a teenager. Things like imagining what would happen if you chased a beam of light and sped up until you caught it. This short work of fiction is along those lines and at times it made me think a little of [a:Kurt Vonnegut Jr.|2778055|Kurt Vonnegut Jr.|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1433582280p2/2778055.jpg], a comparison Lightman might not like—he teaches physics and writing at MIT—but seems apt to me in some parts.
Einstein's Dreams is physically a tiny book, 179 pages long and six-and-a-half inches …

Review of "Einstein's dreams" on 'Storygraph'

You don't need to know any physics at all to read this book. It is a set of short stories more about psychological than physical time. I found it quite poetic and thought provoking. Each story is something Einstein could have dreamed as he explored the nature of time; in most, time goes at different rates depending on something else, such as which town you are in. In each, the author explores how that would affect the relationship between people. If you think carefully, you will realize that this is exactly what happens in our own universe.

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