Review by New York Times Review
So, what is God really like? As personified by the author of "Einstein's Dreams" in this fanciful account of how the Supreme Being cobbled together the cosmos, he's a good sleeper. Mr. g also meditates with titanic abandon. ("I breathed in the Void, breathed out the Void.") Like that Potter kid, another master conjurer, God has spent his formative years living with an aunt and uncle (albeit these two are of a more sympathetic bearing). Beginning with an insistent whimsy that braces the reader for a higher-minded version of "Creation for Dummies," Lightman's novel quickly evolves into a soulful riff on the birth and eventual demise of our universe. Punctilious forays into physics alternate with face-offs between the book's divine narrator and an operagoing dark opponent named Belhor, who wrestle over elusive matters like human suffering and mortality. Lightman the humanist allows room for the compatibility of rationality with spirituality and mystery, while Lightman the scientist plays devil's advocate with the partisans of Genesis, blinding them with logic. Jan Stuart is the author of "The Nashville Chronicles: The Making of Robert Altman's Masterpiece."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 29, 2012]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* Novelist and physicist Lightman (Ghost, 2007) takes us to the Void, where three entities, the genius Mr g, fussy Aunt Penelope, and kind Uncle Deva, loll about until Mr g expresses his intention of doing something, thus instantly establishing a past (when nothing was done) and, therefore, time itself. He soon creates space and energy, which prompts this meditative thinker to come up with quantum physics in order to weave a bit of artistic ambiguity into the universe he playfully sets in motion. A stranger, Belhor, inexplicably appears, asking annoying questions about Mr g's ability to control his creation, thus adding philosophical and spiritual dimensions to the dazzling processes under way. Fluent in the vivid language of particle physics, from oscillations and helices to gluons and quarks, Lightman rhapsodically charts the very geometry of existence, from the birth of stars to the first stirrings of life and the evolution of human beings. As glorious life unfolds by mindless chance, the creator himself is amplified and enlarged by its complex and poignant beauty. With iridescent precision, fairy-tale wonder, and brainy humor, Lightman crafts an enthralling and provocative cosmic parable that offers a startlingly fresh perspective on the mysteries of the universe and the paradoxical human condition.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Physicist and author Lightman (Einstein's Dreams) offers another rumination in the form of a touching, imaginative rendition of God's creation of the universe. Bored with the Void, his bickersome Aunt Penelope and tenderhearted Uncle Deva his only companions through Nothingness, the genius Nephew casts about in his infinite imagination for change, form, and meaning. Seized by an idea, he creates time-past, present, and future-suddenly injecting structure and motion into the "endless sleep" they'd heretofore inhabited. From time follows space and energy, the creation of universes, one of which Nephew favors, calling it Aalam-104729 (after "the ten thousandth prime number in base ten"), endowing it with laws of symmetry, relativity, and causality, and filling it with matter, so that it begins to develop life. Aunt and uncle are thrilled with their new plaything, yet the contrarian Belhor urges God to let the animate creatures have free will, thereby permitting great suffering among them, but also joy. While Belhor insists that the creatures live mean, insignificant lives, and that good and evil are relative but necessary, God sees a grandeur and beauty in their individuality. Above all, the immortal characters are changed by their brush with the enterprising, however doomed, mortals, bringing this elucidating treatment of quantum physics to an affecting, hopeful conclusion. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
In his new book, Lightman (Einstein's Dreams) assumes the voice of God-God being the titular Mr g. The Devil makes an appearance early on with vexing questions like "Do you think it is possible for a thing and its opposite both to be true?" But Mr g goes ahead to create space, time, and matter all the way up to sentient beings with existential quandaries, finally concluding that "this relationship between time and space was also beautiful and good." (Lightman's background as a theoretical physicist serves him well here.) Still, the demons Baphomet and Belhor keep showing up with more questions about free will. The novel's not as heavy as the subjects imply. This God seems young and caught between his squabbling Aunt Penelope and Uncle Deva. Though Lightman's clever irreverence recalls Salman Rushdie and Kevin Brockmeier, his plainspoken style lends the book a fitting -earnestness, although the characters are less interesting than the scientific details. -VERDICT Readers who don't mind the liberties the author takes with the sacred might enjoy this scienced fiction.-Travis Fristoe, -Alachua Cty. Lib. Dist., FL (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.