Robert L. Forward (1932–2002)
Author of Dragon's Egg
About the Author
Series
Works by Robert L. Forward
Maestro del tiempo 1 copy
Associated Works
Great Science Fiction Stories By the World's Greatest Scientists (1985) — Author — 56 copies, 2 reviews
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. C, No. 4 (April 1980) (1980) — Contributor — 29 copies, 1 review
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. XCVII, No. 9 (September 1977) (1977) — Contributor — 25 copies
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. CIII, No. 2 (February 1983) (1983) — Contributor — 23 copies
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. CIII, No. 1 (January 1983) (1983) — Contributor — 17 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Forward, Robert Lull
- Birthdate
- 1932-08-15
- Date of death
- 2002-09-21
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of Maryland (BS | Physics)
University of California, Los Angeles (MS | Applied physics)
University of Maryland (PhD | Physics) - Occupations
- physicist
inventor
science writer
science fiction writer
future technologist - Organizations
- Hughes Aircraft Research Laboratories
Forward Unlimited
Tethers Unlimited
Mirror Matter Newsletter
US Air Force - Relationships
- Forward, Martha Dodson (spouse)
Fuller, Julie Forward (child)
Forward, Bob (child) - Cause of death
- cancer (brain)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Geneva, New York, USA
- Place of death
- Seattle, Washington, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Discussions
Dragon's Egg in Good Show Sir! — bad science fiction and fantasy covers (September 2025)
Found: Exploring a distant star system, small group men & women, assisted by "Christmas tree" artificial intelligence or robot in Name that Book (August 2021)
Reviews
I'm not really sure what to think about this book. I liked the parts with the cheela best. I didn't really find any of the humans believable. Maybe there was too much effort in making them "from the future"? Whatever the case, I connected much more with the cheela than the humans.
It took me a long time to get into it. The concept is fascinating, though, and I'd be curious to see what it was like if we ever did meet an alien race who lived on a different time scale from us. (Well. I'm curious show more to meet another (peaceful) alien race, period.)
I had the same complaint others had about all the humans being intelligent and (in the case of the women) beautiful. Also: why did there need to be mention of not wearing a bra in space? And did anyone else stop to think about the no-bra-in-zero-G logistics? That could get really annoying and potentially painful for the woman. Yeah. Give me the cheela over the humans any day. show less
It took me a long time to get into it. The concept is fascinating, though, and I'd be curious to see what it was like if we ever did meet an alien race who lived on a different time scale from us. (Well. I'm curious show more to meet another (peaceful) alien race, period.)
I had the same complaint others had about all the humans being intelligent and (in the case of the women) beautiful. Also: why did there need to be mention of not wearing a bra in space? And did anyone else stop to think about the no-bra-in-zero-G logistics? That could get really annoying and potentially painful for the woman. Yeah. Give me the cheela over the humans any day. show less
We need more sci-fi books like this. There is all I love in a sci-fi book: hard physics, a mind-bending concept of alien life, an optimistic view of the future. I don't want to spoil the fun so I won't go into the details of how the pressure, magnetic field and gravity of the neutron star affect its inhabitants, but if you have some knowledge of physics (and/or of Star Trek LOL) you'll guess what's coming!
I hadn't had such fun since the spider society in Children of Time, and I have to say show more that the two books are very similar, albeit Dragon's Egg predates the other novel by decades. Forward must have inspired a whole genre, and I am here for it.
The social evolution on the surface of the neutron star is very much modelled on human history - again, pretty much as in Children of Time - and the human characters are quite roughly sketched, but the novel is thoroughly enjoyable nonetheless, especially if you like to be introduced to a different way of experiencing the world, through the eyes of an alien creature. I particularly liked the way Forward gave the Cheela society an original twist about sex, gender relationships and parenthood without making it feel forced. At some stage I was thinking Cheela for few minutes even after putting the book down :)
The biological evolution of the Cheela is also quite fun to witness, at least for a reader like me, quite ignorant in matters of biology and biochemistry. Maybe people with a more solid background will find the science laughable, but I had a helluva time. show less
I hadn't had such fun since the spider society in Children of Time, and I have to say show more that the two books are very similar, albeit Dragon's Egg predates the other novel by decades. Forward must have inspired a whole genre, and I am here for it.
The social evolution on the surface of the neutron star is very much modelled on human history - again, pretty much as in Children of Time - and the human characters are quite roughly sketched, but the novel is thoroughly enjoyable nonetheless, especially if you like to be introduced to a different way of experiencing the world, through the eyes of an alien creature. I particularly liked the way Forward gave the Cheela society an original twist about sex, gender relationships and parenthood without making it feel forced. At some stage I was thinking Cheela for few minutes even after putting the book down :)
The biological evolution of the Cheela is also quite fun to witness, at least for a reader like me, quite ignorant in matters of biology and biochemistry. Maybe people with a more solid background will find the science laughable, but I had a helluva time. show less
The concept is brilliant: intelligent life evolves on a neutron star, which means they experience the world a million times faster than us.
The question of how to communicate with a being whose lifespan unfolds over your coffee break adds an interesting personal dimension, as we see relationships develop in which each side has a very different experience of their shared time. The progress of the civilisation as a whole is just as compelling. The cheela (inhabitants of the neutron star), show more while capable of reasoning and abstract thought, had been acting essentially on instinct, under the harsh constraints of their environment. But with the slightest prod from human contact, they explode into civilisation.
Given their ability to spend a lifetime planning a response to any move from the humans, the cheela are able to run rings around us; no spoilers, though, about what they choose to do.
As usual, I'd love to be able to read a book like this without having to hear how hot all the female scientists are, but hey. show less
The question of how to communicate with a being whose lifespan unfolds over your coffee break adds an interesting personal dimension, as we see relationships develop in which each side has a very different experience of their shared time. The progress of the civilisation as a whole is just as compelling. The cheela (inhabitants of the neutron star), show more while capable of reasoning and abstract thought, had been acting essentially on instinct, under the harsh constraints of their environment. But with the slightest prod from human contact, they explode into civilisation.
Given their ability to spend a lifetime planning a response to any move from the humans, the cheela are able to run rings around us; no spoilers, though, about what they choose to do.
As usual, I'd love to be able to read a book like this without having to hear how hot all the female scientists are, but hey. show less
Forward is famous for writing the hardest of hard sf. Nothing in his books goes beyond what is possible under the laws of physics, and often the exposition of pure science overwhelms the story. However this lyrical and beautifully written novel transcends the nitty-gritty to soar through realms of near-poetry. Its simply a beautiful story of a one-way trip to a fantastic planetary system and the meeting with the intelligent life, so different from ours, that inhabits it. Superb piece of show more writing. This is how good sf should be. show less
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