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The Terminal Experiment Mass Market Paperback – Dec 1 2009
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Dr. Peter Hobson has created a monster. Three of them, in fact. In order to test his theories of immortality and life after death, he has created three electronic simulations of his own personality. The first Hobson has all memory of physical existence edited out. It will simulate life after death. The second Hobson is without knowledge of aging or death. It will simulate immortality. The third Hobson is unmodified. A control. But now all three of them have escaped from Hobson's computer into the web.
And one of them is a killer...
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Canada
- Publication dateDec 1 2009
- Dimensions10.92 x 2.62 x 19.05 cm
- ISBN-100143175114
- ISBN-13978-0143175117
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About the Author
Robert J. Sawyer was born in Ottawa and lives in Mississauga with his wife, poet Carolyn Clink. He has won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards for best novel. The ABC TV series FlashForward was based on his novel of the same name.
Product details
- Publisher : Penguin Canada (Dec 1 2009)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0143175114
- ISBN-13 : 978-0143175117
- Item weight : 227 g
- Dimensions : 10.92 x 2.62 x 19.05 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: #311,712 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,028 in Cyberpunk Science Fiction (Books)
- #1,093 in Technothrillers (Books)
- #2,668 in Canadian Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Robert J. Sawyer is one of only eight writers ever to win all three of the world’s top awards for best science-fiction novel of the year: the Hugo, the Nebula, and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award. He has also won the Robert A. Heinlein Award, the Edward E. Smith Memorial Award, and the Hal Clement Memorial Award; the top SF awards in China, Japan, France, and Spain; and a record-setting sixteen Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Awards (“Auroras”).
Rob’s novel FlashForward was the basis for the ABC TV series of the same name, and he was a scriptwriter for that program. He also scripted the two-part finale for the popular web series Star Trek Continues.
He is a Member of the Order of Canada, the highest honor bestowed by the Canadian government, as well as the Order of Ontario, the highest honor given by his home province; he was also one of the initial inductees into the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame.
Rob lives just outside Toronto.His website and blog are at sfwriter.com, and on Facebook, Twitter, and Patreon he’s RobertJSawyer.
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If you're not familiar with Robert J. Sawyer either you hate science fiction, or you've been living under a rock. In either case you really should check it out as it's a fairly good sample of what his writing tends to be like.
With only few words, we can quickly grasp the visual aspect and feel of the scene the story takes place in.
I even felt sick every time I read the part about the medical surgery at the beginning of the book.
The story is compelling, and we want to get involved in resolving the crimes taking place in the book as we read it.
The Terminal Experiment is a story about Peter Hobson and his incredible discovery that changes the way the world thinks of immortality and life after death. Furthering his research he creates three computer simulations of himself, two with tweaking and the third a control. Gaining access to the WWW, they free themselves and at least one of them is committing horrible crimes.
In reading this book I felt the same way as I did reading The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo; entertained enough, but left wanting. It wasn't until I tried to think of it more like a mystery/thriller and less like sci-fi that I started to enjoy it a lot more. The main weakness was the lack of character development that prevented me from really connecting with most of the characters.
The Terminal Experiment was a fast and easy read and I enjoyed the ethical, moral and philosophical discussions when they occurred. If you are looking for a page turner and a good summer read, you will love this book.
"Hobson's Choice", named with a touch of irony after the primary protagonist, Dr. Peter Hobson, and the title of the novel's serialization in Analog magazine, "is the choice between immortality or a scientifically verified life after death." Hobson's fascination with AI reaches new levels when he discovers an electromagnetic pulse that can be monitored as it escapes from the brain at time of death. He calls it a "soul-wave". Does that mean that a "soul" can be scientifically identified? Where does it lead and how long does it survive outside the body? Does it apply to everybody or was it a fluke? What about animals? Sawyer explores these topics with his usual sharp, investigative mind both from the technological angle as well as the spiritual.
Hobson's friend and partner in AI experiments is Sakar Muhammed. Together, they dream up a scheme that should provide new insights into brain functions after death. They do this by developing sophisticated computer models of Peter's complete brain map. The three models are not identical so that they can monitor the different behaviour patterns in the virtual environment. But then the virtual and the actual realities collide with consequences the two scientists have not foreseen... Are they in the end faced with a real "Hobson's Choice"?
As in the recent novels, brilliant to my mind, this novel combines the human aspects of what artificial intelligence (AI) can provide through advanced technology. He embeds pertinent questions of life after death and the morality resulting from the application of the technological advances into a full-fledged detective and mystery story. At times the story moves a bit slowly and there are unnecessary repetitions. His protagonists' characters are well drawn, their personal lives complicated by events and strong emotions. Other players, in particular, Sandra, Peter's wife are less convincing and rather shallow despite her role in the personal drama. While the reader may have more insights in what is going on than the protagonists, the unraveling of events is as creative as it is unique. Sawyer's knowledge of the latest science is, as usual, spot on and the realization of some of his fictional developments are within reach just a few years later. It makes the reading or rereading of Terminal Experiment years after publication particularly interesting and stimulating. [Friederike Knabe]
Top reviews from other countries
So, yes, the more salient topic here is of course the murder aspect: if you’ve read the book’s promotional blurb you know the plot concerns itself with a computer program that in essence comes “alive” and is quite literally killing flesh-and-blood characters out there in the real world. And yes, I’m aware this topic has been out there already; the book was published 20 years ago. But like a great sporting event you’ve seen before, the book handles its certainly “trope-ic” topic in a way that is innovative and fresh and lets us see its concept in a new and stimulating light.
For instance, the artificial intelligence(s) is not the initial focus of central character Peter Hobson: when he is a young medical grad student he has the opportunity to fulfill credit hours by observing a doctor and his team harvesting organs from a motorcycle crash victim’s dead body. Hobson’s early enthusiasm for the procedure is given a horrible shock when he observes the victim’s body go through very life-like -seizures, and afterward the post grad comes up with the idea of creating a neural net not unlike a shower cap that will map the brain’s activity of dying patients. It is through this procedure that he begins to notice a recurrent phenomenon: a small amount of electrical energy seems to “escape” the body and travel onward.
It is because of this phenomenon that Hobson decides to investigate whether there is indeed an afterlife, and wonders if he can mimic it by creating three copies of his brain by cleverly removing certain aspects from two of them: the first will represents life after death; the second, an immortal mind; and finally, the third will be a “control,” or unaltered copy. And yes, one copy seems to be guilty of murder… first one, then two, and then, well….
For me, the suspense is merely a by-product of a great topic; it’s not why I read Sawyer. No, he “sells” his book from the first words on. Though THE TERMINAL EXPERIMENT is certainly suspenseful, I don’t feel Sawyer is necessarily merely hoping we will nail-bite our fingers while sitting up all night to read the next page. No, I believe it’s more that TERMINAL is asking us to look at what it is that makes up the human soul, to wonder if there is indeed a “life” thereafter… and, in fact, whether there might be a God. While many might argue that this is not a proper topic for sci-fi – that in fact, this is a better topic for religious books like THE SHACK (by William P. Young) – it’s not one he shies away from: in fact, a decade later this is a KEY factor in Sawyer’s excellent novel CALCULATING GOD (which was nominated for a Hugo award).
Though TERMINAL’s topic is really the soul, it’s handled with Sawyer’s typically wry and clever approach. It’s not just through Hobson’s life that we see things develop...for instance, the story frequently steps back and let us see the topic through a variety of clips from the media. For instance:
“The suicide rates on Native reserves in the United States in Canada, and in the three largest ghettos in the US, were at a five-year high this past month. One suicide note, from Los Angeles, typified a recurrent theme: ‘Something beyond this life exists. It can’t be worse than being here.’”
In essence, Sawyer does what those other great sci-fi authors do: he writes well enough to let his provocative ideas sell the story. In fact, the author drives us to do what we must do with ALL literature, particularly sci-fi, and that is to suspend our disbelief by taking frankly difficult topics and building them step by step. We accept what we are reading because the authors let characters behave like people do, and by melding science fiction with the actions of everyday people and proceeding onward. I have read almost Sawyer’s entire collection and can hardly wait for his next.
A little factoid I’ll throw in here for those who care: I was in near seventh heaven when Hobson relates to us that he is beginning to enjoy what was for him a new author: mystery writer Robert B. Parker’s SPENSER series…which is one of my favorites. Sadly, Mr. Parker passed on a short while ago, though his character(s) live on through other author’s penning new books. I can only hope Robert J. Sawyer is here for decades to come.
Not all Nebula Award novels seem to me to be worthy of that recognition, but this one is. I found the book to be something of a page turner. I wanted to find out what happened to the characters more than I wanted a resolution to the mystery. The characters are very well developed with rich, full lives and confronting their own human failings. Of course, they are not completely real because this is science fiction.
The story centers around three people, the main protagonist, Peter, Peter's wife Cathy, and Sarkar, Peter's best friend. Sarkar is not nearly as developed as the other two but he has enough personality to be more than just a prop.
The novel starts at the end of the story with near resolution of the mystery. There is enough left to keep you wondering. More than that, I had a real interest in how the story got to that ending. Luckily, it makes sense at the end.







