About Twistor
by John Cramer
[Twistor cover 3]

Twistor

Twistor by John Cramer

A Novel of Hard Science Fiction
by John Cramer
$4.99 (Novel) ISBN 978-1-61138-299-0

A condensed-matter physics experiment in a university physics laboratory produces an unexpected breakthrough, when the apparatus begins swapping normal matter with “shadow matter.” Industrial espionage goes awry and young physicist David Harrison and two small children find themselves inside a giant tree in an alternate Earth populated by strange, wonderful, and dangerous six-legged wildlife. David and the children must find a way back, while dealing with the local fauna and peeking and poking at the Earth they left to thwart the agents who caused their problems.

Order from  Amazon at : https://www.amazon.com/Twistor-John-Cramer-ebook/dp/B01GFERBEW .


SF Authors comment on Twistor:

“Finally, the most exciting novel about the cutting edge of physics since Timescape. Twistor takes you into the lab and through the world of far-out theory, all in a swooping story of adventure.”

—DAVID BRIN

Twistor tells an exciting story that employs concepts even more exciting.  Authors who not only know science but practice it are all too rare. John Cramer’s distinguished career as a physicist enables him to give this novel a ring of authenticity not only scientific, but human.”

—POUL ANDERSON

Twistor is a rare blend of high imagination and fun by a writer who understands how research really works, on both the scientific and human levels, it made me feel as if 1 were back in the lab myself—and glad to be there.”

—STANLEY SCHMIDT

 “Twistor marks the arrival of a major new science-fiction  talent.  John Cramer knows science, and people.  He possesses  to a phenomenal degree the wit, ingenuity, and soaring imagination all of us hope for; and they make Twistor a book no intelligent reader should miss.”

—GENE WOLFE

“True hard science fiction—deftly done, with plenty of fine surprises.”

—GREGORY BENFORD


Publication History:


Here's the first chapter of Twistor, as provided by Amazon.


Twistor was my first novel. Writing it resulted in a nomination for the Compton Crook Award (Best 1st Novel, 1990) and in two nominations (1990 and 1991) for the John W. Campbell Award (Best New Writer). It was also on the semi-final ballot for the 1991 Nebula Awards.

Twistor was written to fill a need I perceived in the SF market for good "hard SF" written by scientists about the business of doing science. It was edited by David G. Hartwell and published in hardcover by Wm. Morrow in 1989. It was also available in hardcover from the Science Fiction Book Club. It was published in paperback in 1991 by AvoNova (Avon) in the USA and by NEL (New English Library) in the UK. A Japanese Edition (Hyakawa - 1996) has was published under the title The Shadow of Gravity.. In the USA (5/97) Twistor was reprinted by Avon in a new and slightly revised edition, along with my hard SF novel Einstein's Bridge.  More recently, Twistor was reprinted by Dover Books with a new introduction by Gene Wolfe.

John G. Cramer
July 3, 2023

[Twistor cover]

This is the Twistor book jacket from the original Morrow hardcover edition (1989).
The cover painting was done by Bob Eggleton.
Click on the icon for a larger (25k) image.

[Twistor cover 2]

This is the  Twistor book cover used on the Avon paperback edition (1997).
Click on the icon for a larger (25k) image.

[Twistor cover 3]

This is the  Twistor book cover used on the Dover paperback edition (2014).
Click on the icon for a larger (25k) image.


This is the blurb about Twistor from the jacket of the Morrow hardcover edition:

Science fiction at its best is about how much fun it is to do real science, to experience the excitement of scientific ideas, and to use them to build wonderful new devices that do new things, that transform our lives. This kind of science fiction is called "hard SF" by the fans, the hard stuff that is the finest pleasure of the connoisseur. Twistor is hard SF.

Twistor is a first novel by John Cramer, who is known to SF readership for his "Alternate View" columns in Analog magazine. He brings the knowledge of the grit and detail of the everyday life of the working scientist to the story of David Harrison, the young physicist who discovers the twistor effect, an astounding breakthrough in experimental physics that puts alternate physical universes within reach of human exploration.

The plot thickens when some hired thugs are sent by a corporate espionage agent to steal David's experimental device. As David is about to send the whole shebang, including a big chunk of his lab, into another universe and out of reach of the thieves, he finds the two young children of one of his colleagues have hidden in his lab to surprise him. In a split second, David decides, and he and the children pass together through the twistor field into another world, leaving the bewildered thugs behind.

Stranded on another Earth not quite like ours, David must use his basic knowledge to become a Robinson Crusoe in this new place, to save himself and the children, and to find a way back home.

The forefront of science fiction is the scientific speculation found in hard SF. Twistor is based on real physics, provicative and even startling. Such writers as Larry Niven, David Brin, Gregory Benford, and James P. Hogan have made their reputations writing this kind of fiction. Add Cramer's name to that list. Twistor is essential SF.

John Cramer lives in Seattle, Washington, where he is professor of physics at the University of Washington. He plans a sequel to Twistor.


"This book originates, then, not only from a scientist well up in his profession but also from deeply felt and thoroughly incorporated SF traditions. Twistor ... is as handsome and well-formed a work of its kind as one could ask for ... The sense of rigor derives from Cramer's ingenuity in finding unexpected and charming ways to show us the shadow universe in which the bulk of the extraterrestrial action occurs, and in it things captivatingly like-but-unlike things in our world ... captivatingly better ... If there is a 'hard-science' genre, John Cramer has excellently filled our needs in that respect, and one looks forward to a sequel. This book is what SCIENCE fiction is demonstrably all about. The rest of what is done in SF has more to do with the fiction."


Algis Budrys, MAGAZINE OF F&SF (4/89)


Reader Reviews from Amazon (Rating: 4.3 stars)

Peter Payne
4.0 out of 5 stars
A nice book, esp.

Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2010

Verified Purchase

     Like Einstein's Bridge, this is totally a great book to read, especially now that so much has changed since they were penned. In addition to as well-put-together story that has a lot of hard science in it, they have hackers using Macintosh computers and 14K baud modems, laptops called "Portable Power PC" and other wacky stuff. Best of all is this quote from the back of the book, from 1987: "The Internet is a worldwide computer network that has been in very active use by the physics community for over a decade." Isn't that cute?

Michael E. Murray
4.0 out of 5 stars
A blast from the past

Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2014

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     Set back in the old days of floppy and laser discs this reminds me of a historical novel. The story was good and the science was what you would expect from someone with a PhD in physics. It is amazing to see how much science and technology has changed in 25 years.
     I had a problem with the condition of the book and the seller (Books Squared) took care of it within a few days.

  

William Blau
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hard SF by a gifted writer.

Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2020

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     Great experience for anyone who loves VERY hard SF.  I enjoyed reading a novel by a scientist whose quantum handshake theory is very impressive.

Ron Watts
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Read, Exciting Adventure

Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2014

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     No true lover of sci-fi should miss reading this book. It starts off a bit choppy, like the author was just learning his craft (which he was), but after the first couple of chapters the read just got better and better.  A really great story about string theory, alternate universes, problems in crossing their boundaries, and the hidden agendas of some physicists who get too chummy with militaristic types.  I absolutely loved this book.

John VanHoozer
5.0 out of 5 stars
but I've always liked that Cramer will talk about the real physics at ...

Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2016

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     Some of the technology is dated, but I've always liked that Cramer will talk about the real physics at the end of the book.
     Cramer's books are always what real hard science fiction should be, grounded in science, but taken to a new extreme.

 

Matthew O'Neal
5.0 out of 5 stars
 Buy this book
!

Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2019

Verified Purchase

     I love this book, want to buy a hard cover for the shelf. What a great author.

Gordon Hayes
4.0 out of 5 stars
I enjoyed the storyline, and I'm very pleased to still have ...

Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2015

     I knew Prof Cramer back when he was writing it, from being online and under his online handle. Then he published, and I got to finally meet him in person at the U Bookstore and have him sign his book.  Many of us online waited on the book to come out and be able to read a science fiction book by a scientist who was using real science, not to mention by someone we kind of knew.  I thought it was a solid first effort, I enjoyed the storyline, and I'm very pleased to still have a signed copy of it in my library at home.

Book fanatic
4.0 out of 5 stars
A fascinating read.

Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2014

     This book was incredibly fascinating, even though I found some of the hard science fiction a bit confusing. It is well written, the plot is interesting, intriguing and flows superbly from page to page.  Some of the theories used in the novel have since come to be passé, as the book was written some years ago, but this does nothing to detract from the intensity of the novel. The characters are fairly well developed, although it is more centered on the scientific experiments rather than too much on the character's backgrounds. It is most certainly well worth the read for the suspense, and multiple universes questions it poses and leaves one wondering - what if ...?

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This page was created by John G. Cramer on 7/10/96 and updated 7/03/2023.