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Review Excerpts
Robert J. Sawyer's Far-Seer
Allen A. Debus in Dinosaurs in Fantastic Fiction:
A Thematic Survey: "The most memorable interstellar dinosaurs
of all were introduced in Robert J. Sawyer's Far-Seer
trilogy. Collectively, Sawyer's Far-Seer, Fossil Hunter, and
Foreigner are the greatest trilogy of tales ever
written about intelligent, space-faring dinosaurs."
Roger MacBride Allen, New York Times bestselling Star Wars
author: "Robert J. Sawyer's Far-Seer
makes a lot of
promises and keeps them. A fascinating world, remarkable
characters, and a problem of world-shattering proportions. What
more can you ask for?"
Amazing Stories (Wisconsin): "Some books are just fun;
some are interesting because of the characters; others attract
you with the unusual or by looking at the world in a new way. In
Far-Seer, Robert Sawyer has written a book that has all of
these qualities."
Tom Easton in Analog (New York): "Afsan's world
and nature feel quite real. The reader gets involved and cheers
him on, and many another writer must say to Sawyer just what one
saurian says to a superior: ‘I cast a shadow in your presence.’"
Cory Doctorow: "Sawyer's doing interesting things here.
He's created a believable alien culture that steers clear of
anthropomorphism. The trick of creating a sympathetic yet
alien protagonist is tough to pull off, but Sawyer manages it.
The story itself is a classic quest, full of satisfying
revelations and resolutions. Highly recommended."
Books in Canada (Toronto): "Fascinating. Far-Seer
entertains as a fantasy, but in its rendering of young Afsan's
scientific zeal, and the price he pays for asking, ‘How do we
know what we know?’, the book winks at philosophy."
Books in Canada (again):
"A modern parable about the conflict between science and religious faith.
Painstakingly researched, lucidly written, meticulously crafted a
vivid depiction of the scientific method and the scientific mind."
Charles de Lint in The Ottawa Citizen: "Constantly
engaging. Proves Sawyer's first novel, Golden Fleece, was
no fluke."
Charles de Lint (again) in The Journal of Canadian
Content in Speculative Literature: "A cracking good yarn.
Here's your chance to get in on the ground floor of a series that
promises to deliver something truly different."
Terence M. Green, author of Shadow of Ashland:
"This is the novel that Robert A. Heinlein, Arthur C. Clarke and
Frederik Pohl would have written if they had pooled their skills
in their prime."
Tanya Huff, author of Blood Price: "Sawyer has
returned a sense of wonder to Science Fiction."
Baird Searles in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine (New York): A "tour de force. Vastly enjoyable,
beautifully realized."
KLIATT: Young Adult Paperback Book Guide (Newton,
Massachusetts) (starred review "highlighting an exceptional
book"): "This is a truly great piece of SF."
Michael A. Burstein: "As delightful and thought-provoking as Rob's
first novel, Golden Fleece."
Tim DeForest writing in the 2012 teaching anthology
Sense of Wonder:
"Robert J. Sawyer builds a complex and believable dinosaur
civilization in a trilogy beginning with Far-Seer. Here,
dinosaurs have been mysteriously re-located onto an Earth-sized
moon orbiting a gas giant, allowing them to escape extinction.
The species that develops intelligence eventually builds culture
that holds very rigid and dogmatic beliefs. A scientist named
Afsan, who acts as a thematic parallel to Galileo, finds his life
in danger when he makes discoveries that seem to threaten those
beliefs. Sawyer's trilogy is full of great action and great
ideas."
Midwest Book Review: "Robert Sawyer has been compared with
the giants of science fiction, including the Big Three. Let me add
another comparison. His tapestry of a totally alien and totally plausible
culture is reminiscent of the artistry and imagination of Frank Herbert.
Mr. Sawyer, I cast a shadow in your presence."
Tee Morris, author of Morevi:
"There should be more stories of these kinds of heroes. I'm feeling
nothing but love for this book."
New York Newsday: "Quirky; diverting an inventive and
engaging novel."
The New York Review of Science Fiction: "Refreshing
and different; a genuinely unusual and appealing story an
instructive and top-notch depiction of science at work."
Garfield Reeves-Stevens, author of Dark Matter:
"Far-Seer is a tale of rousing high adventure told with
the heart of an old-fashioned storyteller and the keen eye of a
scientist. In the tradition of Hal Clement and the other masters
of hard sf, Sawyer has created an alien yet wholly believable
world, elegantly realized with a grand sense of wonder that is
meticulously based in real science."
Publishers Weekly (New York): "Sawyer does a fine job."
Quill & Quire: Canada's Magazine of Book News and Reviews
(Toronto) (starred review "indicating a book of exceptional
merit"): "Riveting; compelling; thrilling a real treat. The
science in Far-Seer is impeccable, the story-line is
refreshingly original, and the world Sawyer's constructed is
audacious. He's already being compared to Heinlein, Clarke, and
Pohl, an illustrious company of SF masters. If he keeps up the
high standard set by Far-Seer, this comparison will be
well deserved."
Hugo-award winner Mike Resnick, author of Paradise:
"Even better than Golden Fleece, and that's going some.
Robert Sawyer's Far-Seer proves he's as good at
world-building as he is at telling an exciting and satisfying
story."
Science Fiction Chronicle (New York): "This is an
adventure story, a commentary on the conflict between truth and
established faith, and a fascinating exploration of an alien,
though familiar society. Two sequels are planned, but this is
complete enough in itself that you shouldn't wait."
SFRA Review: "Exciting, amusing [but] much more than
an adventure tale. Crucial to the plot is Afsan's struggles to
find the truth of his own destiny and his questioning of the role
of science in countering religious dogma. Sawyer has created a
world exceptional in its attention to detail. Unobtrusively, he
embeds everything about the language, religion, science, social
customs, political intrigue, and even saurian diet."
S. M. Stirling, author of Marching Through Georgia:
"A brilliant parable of the nature of scientific investigation,
and its relation to art and faith."
John E. Stith, author of Redshift Rendezvous:
"Robert J. Sawyer's recipe for Far-Seer:
one enormous
sense of wonder; one boatload of convincing and charming aliens;
one planetful of accurate and fascinating science; one truly
breathtaking premise. Mix well and stir. Sawyer's a hell of a
chef."
The Toronto Star: "Without question, Far-Seer will
be remembered as one of the year's outstanding sf books."
Under the Ozone Hole (Vancouver): "Far-Seer is a
galloping good read; an adventure that quickly reaches a
breathless pace."
Andrew Weiner, author of Station Gehenna: "A
landmark in hard science fiction. Succeeds on many levels: as a
fascinating piece of world-building; as an action-packed
adventure; as a coming-of-age novel; but perhaps most of all, as
a book about the scientific method and the scientific mind. An
intriguing intellectual odyssey; a bravura performance."
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