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Finity (1999)

von John Barnes

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424859,132 (3.36)3
Writers as diverse as Philip K. Dick Robert Harris and Len Deighton have told us what our past and present would be like had the unthinkable happened and the Nazi¿s won the second world war. Now John Barnes has given us a terrible warning of what futures a different past would have made created. In the far future the Third Reich is heading confidently into its thousand year reign. America was devastated by a nuclear exchange in 1980 and now there is seemingly nothing to stop Nazism spreading its message beyond Earth. One solar system, one people. But history has a way of asserting itself.… (mehr)
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Entertaining high concept Gonzo romp, that falls off a cliff towards the end. Alternate title could be Deadline, after the looming publisher threat that must have pushed Barnes to rap everything up in three pages of exposition and wish fulfillment. Added to the hilarity for me, but I could see this concussion disguised as a conclusion pushing readers to throw this book at the wall. ( )
  GDiddy | May 5, 2020 |
Weird. ( )
  BookstoogeLT | Dec 10, 2016 |
Lesser Barnes and disappointing. Although the title and cover copy makes it clear this is about parallel Earths, about a third of the book is spent just bringing the characters to that understanding. You might think this was in order to develop better his alternate history a century after Hitler won the war the globe is dominated by various Reichs. But the last half of the book ignores all that and turns into a mix of infodumps on the SFnal concepts underneath and chase scenes running from blurrily defined opponents. Sadly, by the end, instead of multiple realities, nothing feels at all real and nothing appears to be at stake. ( )
2 abstimmen ChrisRiesbeck | Mar 21, 2015 |
Finity was an interesting book to read. The premise isn't new -- alternate worlds and histories. I mean Philip K. Dick has the market cornered on that. But Barnes seems to take a fresh approach to this and I couldn't put the book down. I enjoyed it quite a bit.

As the Goodreads description blurb reads, "A professor living in Auckland in a Reich-dominated world is recruited for private industry by a mysterious industrialist. Whenever he and his friends try to even think about the United States, it seems someone is trying to stop them--and even kill them." Lyle is an astronomer recruited by ConTech, owned by a man named Iphwin, in the year 2062, when there are a number of German Reichs around the world, because Germany won World War II. Lyle is an American expat living in New Zealand with other expats. His girlfriend, Helen, is also a professor living the same type of life.

Lyle is hired by Iphwin for his abductive reasoning capabilities, and Helen is hired as his admin assistant. Before they even have a chance to celebrate, Lyle is attacked by Billie Beard, a female Reich goon. And strange things start to happen. First, Lyle's talking boat/car has been messed with and its "brain" needs to be rebooted. Billie roughs him up on it. After he leaves to rendezvous with Helen, he discovers that he's already taken her there, to Saigon, earlier in the day even though he has no recollection of it. In any event, he proposes and they get a diamond ring. They then go a restaurant to celebrate and he is attacked and shot at by a fat German tourist. To his utter shock, his meek little girlfriend pulls out a gun and and shoots the attacker. They're both placed under arrest, where Lyle is shocked to find out his attacker was Billie Beard, again -- not the fat German tourist. Helen also claims she saw Lyle get shot in the attack, when he clearly didn't. Strange things are obviously occurring.

Lyle and Helen belong to a VR chat group. Iphwin places Lyle and Helen under his protection, but they are soon sent on a mission to rescue a ConTech employee in Mexico. When they get there, they are shocked to discover the members of their VR group are there too. Iphwin appears and tells them some things about the world(s) in which they live and why odd things are happening to each of them. He mentions that no one has had any contact with anyone in America for decades and wonders what's happened to America and its occupants. They go on a trek to America to find out for themselves. They discover that the world has been run by quantum computers engaged in parallel computing and that there are innumerable worlds and people jump from one to another -- without knowing it -- when using the Net, phone, or their computer operated vehicles. That explains the hardened battle operative Helen Lyle saw kill Billie Beard in the restaurant as opposed to his usually mild Helen. Even more odd, Iphwin lets them know he's one of these computing "phages" in human form and its his need to know what's happened to America that allowed them all to gather together simultaneously in the same world to go on this journey with him.

Their trip is dangerous. Billie Beard, thought dead, keeps appearing, trying to kill them. Turns out she's a phage too. Some of the group members are killed, but the survivors keep plugging along, determined to make it to a facility in Santa Fe called the Department of the Pursuit of Happiness. Iphwin thinks this will answer everything.

I'm not going to give away the ending, but I thought it too abrupt and unsatisfying. Barnes tries to tie everything up neatly, but it's not what I would have done if I were writing it, nor is it what I want as a reader. Thus, I'm marking it down to four stars instead of five. Still, the book really was a thriller and hard to put down and I enjoyed reading it. I shall have to read more of Barnes now. Recommended. ( )
  scottcholstad | Feb 13, 2014 |
This has to be one of the weirdest novels I've ever read.

It's the late 21st century, Lyle Peripart, an American ex-patriot living in a world in which Germany won WWII and the world has been divided into independent Reichs, is offered a job by Geoffrey Iphwin, owner of a hugely profitable company called ConTech. The company has come under attack and Iphwin thinks he can figure out the who,how and why behind the attacks, but he needs a specialist in 'abduction mathematics' to do so. It's a means of reasoning that is heavily discussed at the beginning, but isn't very clear on what, exactly, it is.

Strange events begin to occur, such as the repeated reappearance of a dead character bent on killing Lyle and anyone helping him. What he discovers is that no one has the same memories of anything. The problem, as he discovers, is that the use of devices based on quantum physics, which is allowing people, unbeknownst to them, to slip between realities, most of which are so close that people aren't even aware it has happened.

While it starts out slow and with loads of technical discussions between Lyle and Iphwin, it soon becomes a slow-paced adventure tale as Lyle and a hand-picked team try to discover what happened to America, which is off the international grid, so they can hopefully find out how to stop the attacks and interdimensional shifting. Plenty of bad guys and harsh terrain.

This turned out to be an interesting story with a cast of truly unique characters, but the pace was too slow for my taste. The ending is a surprise even though most of this novel is a surprise. If the pace had been better I'd have rated the story higher. ( )
  DavidLErickson | Oct 14, 2013 |
For that matter, never, if you read this book, will have you been made to mind so little that the Nazis have taken over the globe. The solution of the mystery, when it comes, is distinctly desultory, confirming the sense that Finity is the work of a writer essentially on automatic pilot. Barnes is a real talent: but read A Million Open Doors , read Earth Made of Glass, not this heartless bagatelle.
hinzugefügt von andyl | bearbeitenThe Guardian, Francis Spufford (Jan 22, 2000)
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
John BarnesHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Harris, JohnUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Hayden, Patrick NielsenHerausgeberCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Pifher, LisaGestaltungCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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This one's for Adria Branvold, my most loyal reader, because she asked me, "Just once, would it kill you to write an adventure story, with a reasonably happy ending, only a little weird?"
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I am not an imaginative or adventurous person.
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Writers as diverse as Philip K. Dick Robert Harris and Len Deighton have told us what our past and present would be like had the unthinkable happened and the Nazi¿s won the second world war. Now John Barnes has given us a terrible warning of what futures a different past would have made created. In the far future the Third Reich is heading confidently into its thousand year reign. America was devastated by a nuclear exchange in 1980 and now there is seemingly nothing to stop Nazism spreading its message beyond Earth. One solar system, one people. But history has a way of asserting itself.

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