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The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. review – the dark art of time travel

Written By Unknown on Thursday, June 15, 2017 | 4:58 AM

Quantum physics meets practical magic in Neal Stephenson and Nicole Galland’s farcical sci-fi fantasy

As the vector of time is deathward, time as such is tragic, at least for mortal beings like you and me. It follows from this that stories about overcoming time tend towards the comic, because at root they are fantasies of escape from mortality. The most obvious current example is Doctor Who, with a hero who evades death by the magic of “regeneration”.

Of course, there are counterexamples. The original time travel tale, HG Wells’s The Time Machine, takes a gloriously gloomy turn as its hero travels to the far future, where the monstrous crab-like descendants of humanity occupy the terminal beach beneath a dying sun. Wells is wiser than Who in this regard: no matter what technological marvels we deploy, we cannot escape death. So I propose the following rule of thumb: stories that involve going into the future will tend to be more tragic, running as they do along the vector of our own mortality; whereas stories that involve going into the past will tend to be more comic, powered by the levity and liberation we feel as we put distance between ourselves and our own deaths.

Related: Do we still need Doctor Who? Time travel in the internet age

The novel is roomy and enjoyable: characters are lively, the plot moves along and the whole thing has heart and charm

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via Science fiction | The Guardian http://ift.tt/2srHQNk

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