Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Einstein's Dreams

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Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1 December 1992

Genre
  
Novel

Country
  
United Kingdom

4.1/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
192 pp.

Author
  
Alan Lightman

ISBN
  
0679416463

Einstein's Dreams t2gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSDJ56FMAzkJ2E9yD

Similar
  
Alan Lightman books, Albert Einstein books, Novels

Book review einstein s dreams


Einstein's Dreams is a 1992 novel by Alan Lightman that was an international bestseller and has been translated into thirty languages. It was runner up for the 1994 L. L. Winship/PEN New England Award. Einstein's Dreams was also the March 1998 selection for National Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation" Book Club. The novel has been used in numerous colleges and universities, in many cases for university-wide adoptions in "common-book" programs.

Contents

Einstein's Dreams was first adapted for the stage by David Gardiner and Ralf Remshardt and performed at the University of Florida in 1996. An off-off-Broadway production of this stage version ran briefly at the New York Fringe Festival in 2001; it has also been performed in Beijing (2009).

Einstein s dreams a short film


Plot

The novel fictionalizes Albert Einstein as a young scientist who is troubled by dreams as he works on his theory of relativity in 1905. The book consists of 30 chapters, each exploring one dream about time that Einstein had during this period. The framework of the book consists of a prelude, three interludes, and an epilogue. Einstein's friend, Michele Besso, appears in these sections. Each dream involves a conception of time. Some scenarios may involve exaggerations of true phenomena related to relativity, and some may be entirely fantastical. The book demonstrates the relationship each human being has to time, and thus spiritually affirms Einstein's theory of relativity.

The novel is sometimes cited as the source of the urban legend apocryphal "universal force" letter from Einstein to his daughter, Lieserl, but the novel does not contain the letter.

References

Einstein's Dreams Wikipedia