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Contact
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Contact by Carl Sagan
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Diane wrote: "Rating: 5 Stars
Read: September 2016
This book reminds me that I need to read more sci-fi, my original first love in literature. This book is brilliant, fascinating, and very thought-provoking. It..."
I keep meaning to get to this book. I'm happy to see your review and thinking I should bump it up on my TBR.
Read: September 2016
This book reminds me that I need to read more sci-fi, my original first love in literature. This book is brilliant, fascinating, and very thought-provoking. It..."
I keep meaning to get to this book. I'm happy to see your review and thinking I should bump it up on my TBR.

Read: March 2020 for my TBR challenge
Had I not picked up this book just at the same time as the COVID-19 outbreak, I am positive I would have enjoyed it more and rated it higher. Because it was good, but my mind was elsewhere, and I was not able to pay fully attention to all the details, which there were a lot of. It also didn't help that the narrator (I heard it as an audio from Audible) clearly had a cold during large parts of the book.
However, to be clear, I did enjoy it. Not so much for the prose or the character development, but the ideas and the story were great. Sagan did a good job in explaining the physics behind, so that it was understandable for us that don't have extensive knowledge in science.
Basically what I took from the book was the following; be curious, ask questions and learn - but also remember to tend to your heart.
I was surprised to actually enjoy this book. This is a book by the scientist/TV star Carl Sagan. He wrote this for TV and it was published in 1985. A book that addressed many issues still present; the struggle of science, politics, religion and equity. The book addresses issues between religion and science s well as other items of globalism. The whole experience of traveling via machine through various passages, talking with someone she had loved in life and then not being able to prove any of it when she returns all parallels a religious experience of wonder. The book reveals a scientist (Sagan) to not be as hard cored atheist as his reputation affirmed. As a novel, it may have been a bit dry, lacking somewhat in the amount of anxiety, fear and tension that would have resulted from a message from space. With that said, I now think about The Three-Body Problem which also is about receiving a message from space.


Books mentioned in this topic
Contact (other topics)The Three-Body Problem (other topics)
Read: September 2016
This book reminds me that I need to read more sci-fi, my original first love in literature. This book is brilliant, fascinating, and very thought-provoking. It is the story of first contact with extraterrestrial life. I watched the movie many years ago and enjoyed it. Since it was so long ago I can't say how much the movie adhered to the book. The book is definitely better. Unfortunately, this is Sagan's only novel. The rest of his books are scientific non-fiction books on astronomy. A sequel would have been great.
I think it is definitely worthy of its spot on the list.