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Schrödinger's Gun: A Tor.Com Original

by Ray Wood

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1531,375,649 (3.57)1
Of all the crime scenes in all the timelines in all the multiverse, Detective O'Harren walks into the basement on West 21st. In every possible universe, Johnny Rivers is dead. But the questions that need answering--who killed him and why--are still a matter of uncertainty. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.… (more)
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Showing 3 of 3
I thought this was a great concept, and the writing was very good. I suppose the only reason I didn't rate it higher is because I wasn't completely happy with the story itself. The background stuff about the Detective's ex and child seemed sort of forced in there. And I am often skeptical of Schrodinger's Cat references that don't acknowledge the fact that Schrodinger himself never intended this thought experiment to represent a real possibility. But. I do think the way the potential universes are represented in this story is good. That's just my personal weird pet peeve. This was definitely a good story. ( )
  widdersyns | Jul 19, 2020 |
More like a 4.5, this story had an almost flawless noir-style voice from the first-person narrator coupled with straightforward world-building, though it's difficul to determine what kind of society this is taking place in (it reminds me a lot of Brandon Sanderson's recent novella Snapshot, where there's one science fiction element in an otherwise contemporary time period). It stayed consistent and we discover about the narrator's heisen implant in a variety of ways as though to make sure we understand the quantum physics behind it (which is sometimes repetitive). Add to this that the mystery plot was well-structured enough to be a taut fit to the format of a short story, and you've got one bomb short-story. ( )
  Ely.sium | Sep 20, 2018 |
Maybe I'm too dumb to get the ending. Or maybe I'm just not convinced of the theory that there are alternate universes out there where different versions of us live. I'll read about that someday and maybe come back to this. Until then, I'm giving this short story three stars.

(Anyone is welcome to explain the ending to me...) ( )
  novewong | Jul 8, 2015 |
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Of all the crime scenes in all the timelines in all the multiverse, Detective O'Harren walks into the basement on West 21st. In every possible universe, Johnny Rivers is dead. But the questions that need answering--who killed him and why--are still a matter of uncertainty. At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

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