SFWRITER.COM > Novels > Rob's Approach to Science Fiction
Hard Science, Real People: My Approach to Science Fiction
by Robert J. Sawyer
Back in 2001, Tor Books was gearing up to create a Tor-branded
Amazon.com store. That never materialized, but I was asked by
Aimee Crump, my publicist back then at Tor, to write
500 words for that site about my approach to science fiction.
It's still what I strive for:
For me, science fiction is about what it means to be human. I say
this despite being a hard-SF writer. I go to great effort to
ensure that the science in my books is accurate, whether it's
relativity in Golden Fleece (Aurora Award winner),
dinosaurian paleontology in End of an Era (Seiun
Award winner), genetics in Frameshift (Hugo Award
nominee, Seiun Award winner), artificial intelligence in
Factoring Humanity (Hugo Award nominee), quantum
physics in FlashForward (Aurora Award winner),
cosmology in Calculating God (Hugo Award nominee),
or paleoanthropology in Hominids (Hugo Award winner).
But the science in my books is really just a springboard for
larger issues. My favorite review of my work says: "Sawyer
compels us to think in a concrete way about concepts that we
usually dismiss as being too metaphysical to grapple with. As he
is clearly aware, the essence of science fiction isn't starships,
robots or virtual reality, but a unique philosophical inquiry
into the evolution of the human spirit" (The Toronto
Star, on FlashForward).
And that, indeed, is precisely what I try to do, using SF to
explore the biggest questions there are: the nature of reality
(Factoring Humanity), whether we have free will
(FlashForward), even whether there is a God
(Calculating God).
To examine those issues, I use characters that I strive to make
as nuanced and subtle, as complex and conflicted, as those in
good mainstream fiction for the only meaningful way to
explore such issues is with real people.
To that end, most of my books don't take place in the far future;
rather, they're set in or near the present. Most of my characters
aren't starship commanders; rather, they're regular women and
men, with marriages that sometimes don't work, dealing with the
realities of their jobs and with children who cause them pain and
joy.
Some SF books make you choose between having either science or
characters, physics or psychology, speculation or philosophy. But
I try to provide both parts of each pair, combining the
intimately human and the grandly cosmic. I want my books to be
relevant to real people's real lives, and so I sprinkle them with
references to pop culture, current politics, actual companies,
and more.
Although I'm known for my optimism, I don't write escapism.
Rather, I write for those who, like me, are struggling to better
understand the real world and all the complex issues that go
along with being human.
More Good Reading
What's a Robert J. Sawyer novel like?
Humor in the SF of Robert J. Sawyer (MP3)
Robert J. Sawyer's awards and honors
Review index
My Very Occasional Newsletter
HOME • MENU • TOP
Copyright © 1995-2024 by Robert J. Sawyer.
|