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Stephen Hoye

Author of Flags of Our Fathers

9+ Works 9 Members 1 Review

Works by Stephen Hoye

Associated Works

The Killer Angels (1974) — Narrator, some editions — 9,749 copies, 197 reviews
In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin (2011) — Narrator, some editions — 8,905 copies, 366 reviews
The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer (2010) — Narrator, some editions — 6,008 copies, 216 reviews
Seventh Son (1987) — Narrator, some editions — 4,928 copies, 77 reviews
Flags of Our Fathers (2000) — Narrator, some editions — 4,426 copies, 50 reviews
In the Company of the Courtesan (2006) — Narrator, some editions — 2,993 copies, 88 reviews
Alvin Journeyman (1995) — Narrator, some editions — 2,797 copies, 23 reviews
Worlds of Exile and Illusion: Three Complete Novels of the Hainish Series in One Volume (1996) — Reader, some editions — 1,826 copies, 26 reviews
Earth Unaware (2012) — Narrator, some editions — 1,323 copies, 45 reviews
Earth Afire (2013) — Narrator, some editions — 964 copies, 26 reviews
Earth Awakens (2014) — Narrator, some editions — 757 copies, 21 reviews
Dragon Age: The Stolen Throne (2009) — Narrator, some editions — 680 copies, 13 reviews
Dragon Age: The Calling (2009) — Narrator, some editions — 517 copies, 7 reviews
The Swarm: The Second Formic War (Volume 1) (2016) — Narrator, some editions — 501 copies, 11 reviews
The Bellini Card (2008) — Narrator, some editions — 492 copies, 23 reviews
Titan (2006) — Narrator, some editions — 442 copies, 15 reviews
Da Vinci's Ghost: Genius, Obsession, and How Leonardo Created the World in His Own Image (2011) — Narrator, some editions — 334 copies, 13 reviews
The Aftermath (2007) — Narrator, some editions — 304 copies, 4 reviews
10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America (2006) — Reader, some editions — 226 copies, 1 review
The Sam Gunn Omnibus (2007) — Narrator, some editions — 194 copies, 4 reviews
Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet (2012) — Narrator, some editions — 154 copies, 8 reviews
V Wars: Blood and Fire: New Stories of the Vampire Wars (2014) — Narrator, some editions — 36 copies, 4 reviews

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Reviews

1 review
It's been fun, over the past few years, reading accounts of recent developments in physics, astronomy, and cosmology. The universe doesn't look the way we thought it did at the start of the 20th century. There are many galaxies, not just one. The universe is expanding. There doesn't appear to be enough matter--enough ordinary matter--to keep the galaxies together, and the rate at which the universe is expanding appears to be accelerating.

The explanations offered for these last two show more developments are dark matter and dark energy. In this case, "dark" merely means that we do not have the faintest idea what they really are. We can't detect them. They don't seem to interact with ordinary matter at all. Except they hold galaxies together and expand the universe...

Dark matter and dark energy are hypotheses that explain the observed facts, but so far there's no direct evidence for either. Stuart Clark discusses the problems with this, as well as the other ways in which recent observations, including a high-resolution photograph of the earliest part of the universe we can detect, have produced findings that just don't fit well at all with the current "standard model" in physics.

He thinks we're due for a paradigm shift.

Realizing Earth orbits the sun, not the other way around, was a paradigm shift. Realizing our galaxy isn't the whole universe was a paradigm shift. At some point soon, he thinks, some young scientist somewhere will look at our current standard model, and throw out a basic assumption we all currently take for granted.

His story of the history of physics, astronomy, and cosmology is lively and interesting, and he makes a compelling case for the need for a new paradigm that allows us to explain our current observations of the universe without the current multiple fudge factors needed to make our equations work.

It's a fascinating book.

I bought this audiobook.
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Works
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Rating
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