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Dark Matter (2007)

by Juli Zeh

Other authors: See the other authors section.

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
3441880,118 (3.47)12
Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

"[A] masterfully constructed story of an intense friendship between two physicists, a marriage, a kidnapping, and a murder, In Free Fall plunges the reader into a hyperreality that is as seductive as it is disturbing."

. HTML:"An elegant quasi-thriller about physics, murder, and the solving of murders . . . This is one of the best books of the year. Zeh has enough control to keep the murder from being lurid and the physics from being dull. Her prose is sharp and often witty, and the excellent translation means every moment shines brightly.". HTML:"Engrossing . . . vivid characters combine with a devastating 11th-hour reveal to make a memorable intellectual thirller.". HTML:"A highly cinematic thriller . . . Zeh's smart novel will appeal to a wide range of readers.". HTML:"Add a hospital scandal and two of the quirkiest detectives in fiction, mix with Juli Zeh's thrumming, moody prose, and you have one of the finest crime novels you'll read.". "It is such a delight to watch Juli Zeh play her entire repertoire of literary skill . . . challenging the conventions of the classical detective story with subtle irony.". "Juli Zeh uses the structure of the detective novel like a composer uses his music book. And into this book she writes, with remarkable consistency, her musical score . . . Here's a piece of literature that takes the liberty to develop its very own rules, and to impose them upon an obsolete form, coming indeed very close to a musical work in its tenor and thematic variation . . . One might think that such perfection, such erudition must leave the reader untouched, bored even . . . but it does not. For that, Zeh's labyrinth is built too cleverly; its corridors are adorned with witty elements; her sentences are of extraordinary brilliance.". HTML:"A novel from Juli Zeh's pen is always an adventure, because each of them opens up an entirely new world . . . This is Juli Zeh's unique talent: Her sharp intellect absorbs the most complex issues, including elementary particles; to then put them into words with such playful precision it makes you swoon . . . In Free Fall takes the bird's-eye view, unorthodox, nerve-racking, simply unforgettable--like Hitchcock's masterpiece.". HTML:"In Free Fall is the virtuosic presentation of an amazing narration. Juli Zeh steers through with confidence and ease.". Despite the grisly murder that is central to the story, IN FREE FALL is a twisty mediation about ideas rather than a crime novel, and, as such, is probably better suited to the eye than the ear. That is to take nothing away from narrator Mark Bramhall, who is arid when he needs to be--especially in the philosophical arguments between physicist rivals Sebastian and Oscar--and desperate and despairing when called upon--as Sebastian finds his perfect life headed to ruin. But even the most attentive listener will find it difficult to stay on point as the narrative gives way to Zeh's playful commentary on physics and reality. Those who attempt to listen to this book should be forewarned: It is a work that will require full concentration. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine. HTML:The gripping international bestseller that fuses an ingenious detective tale with stunning, cinematic storytelling—and a provocative riff on quantum physics—from Germany’s foremost young literary talent.
A child is kidnapped but does not know it. One man dies, two physicists fight, and a senior constable falls in love. In the end, everything is different . . . yet exactly the same.” —Prologue
A rising star who has garnered some of Europe’s most important literary prizes, Juli Zeh has established herself as the new master of the philosophical thriller. With In Free Fall, she now takes us on a fast-paced ride through deadly rivalry and love’s infinite configurations.
Against the backdrop of Germany and Switzerland, two physicists begin a dangerous dance of distrust. Friends since their university days, when they were aspiring Nobel Prize candidates, they now interact in an atmosphere of tension, stoked by Oskar’s belief that Sebastian fell into mediocrity by having a family. When Sebastian’s son, Liam, is apparently kidnapped, their fragile friendship is further tested. Entrusted with uncovering the truth, Detective Superintendent Schilf discerns a web of blackmail, while at the same time the reality of his personal life falls into doubt. Unfolding in a series of razor-sharp scenes, In Free Fall is a riveting novel of ideas from a major new literary voice. With the recent success of works in translation, such as Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl Who Played with Fire, Zeh is poised to take off.
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» See also 12 mentions

English (8)  Dutch (5)  German (3)  Swedish (1)  Italian (1)  All languages (18)
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
A great change of pace for me. Made me think, in a fun way; made me laugh, and I felt a bit of the madness and sadness of these interesting, well-described characters. This was a fun book to have waiting for me, between other books demanding more of me.

Juli Zeh, whose writing in this book is wonderfully original and always smart, tells a philosophical crime story, a detective story, that, in my perception, manages to include all of us, with our short little lives, and our big huge brains. The lives we humans live and "believe in" are inevitably out of proportion.

We spend so much of our lives playing tug of war with our realities: our misunderstandings, our miscalculations about truth and perspective. I related to this book because, in my own life, I am all too aware of "the observer." I could learn something here. I feel the immediate urge to ponder how many lives I am pretending to live at once. The concept is both thrilling and terrifying.

"Dabblelink" indeed. ( )
  Ccyynn | Feb 15, 2022 |
This dnf is really only because book is due back at library and I can't quite get into it - I will have another go one day
  bsquaredinoz | Mar 31, 2013 |
This review first appeared on my blog: http://www.knittingandsundries.com/2011/03/in-free-fall-by-julie-zeh-book-review...

A strange, symbiotic friendship between Sebastian and Oskar . . . visits with each other that feel like confrontations . . . a doctor's patients that seem to have died from drug experimentation . . . a murder based on a misunderstanding . . . and conflict over the "Many Worlds" theory, which basically means that everything that can happen HAS happened on a parallel timeline . . .

These are some of the happenings in this unusual, sometimes confusing, tension-filled story. This one is not for the casual reader, as I found myself at times backtracking to figure out what just happened. Although I was interested in what was happening, it was not a quick and easy read. As the stories behind the kidnapping of Sebastian's son and the murder of a man with ties to a suspect doctor came out, however, I was stunned at the duplicity and conceit that caused them, even as I found myself confused by the motivation.

QUOTES

For Oskar, Sebastian is not just the only person whose presence brings him pleasure. Sebastian is also the person whose slightest movement can turn him white-hot with rage.

It is always three-word sentences that change the life of a human being in a decisive manner. I love you. I hate you. Father is dead. I am pregnant. Liam has disappeared. Dabbelink must go. After a three-word sentence, one is totally alone.

Ever since his conversation with Sebastian, the detective has been working on a formulation that he himself does not fully understand: The world is the way it is because there are observers to watch it existing.

Writing: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Plot: 3 out of 5 stars
Characters: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Reading Immersion: 3 out 5 stars

BOOK RATING: 3.25 out of 5 stars ( )
  jewelknits | Mar 15, 2011 |
DARK MATTER is one of those books that I picked up with considerable happy anticipation, so was more than a little startled to find myself really struggling to get into the start of it. Until a point at which I found I wasn't struggling and was completely absorbed.

And I suspect that's very much what the book is set out to do. Set in Freiburg near the Black Forest, the book starts out with two men and their obsessions. Their friendship begins at University, studying physics - Sebastian, retains his love of physics opting for academia, sharing his love of physics with his love for his wife Maike and young son Liam. Oskar is less traditional, hanging onto many of the eccentricities of their university days - he goes onto research, pure physics. Despite a falling out between the two, they continue to meet on the first Friday of every month and debate - argue - discuss late into the night. Then Liam is kidnapped and Sebastian is told that he must kill a man to regain his son. Understandably his life shatters, he feels set adrift from everybody and everything and he makes some choices which seem to the reader, the outsider, inexplicable.

It's through the early phase of the book that I really found myself struggling - firstly with the relationship between Sebastian and Oskar which, whilst interesting, didn't seem to be telling me anything in particular, and secondly with how Sebastian, a supposedly intelligent man, managed to let himself be manipulated to that point (despite father love and the desire to do anything to protect your child, without giving the plot away, there are factors which seem inexplicable).

But enter the police Detective Schilf and things get really interesting - the book shifts focus from an almost mocking, frivolous tone into a profoundly emotional character study. Not just a character study, this book quickly evolves into one in which the reader is forced to consider some hairy questions - what would you do if you had weeks or hours to live, one final case, and a guilty man in extenuating circumstances?

It's also at this point that the structure of the book begins to makes sense - and those chapter introductions stop being slightly quirky (Chapter one in seven parts. Sebastian cuts curves. Maike cooks. Oskar comes to visit. Physics is for lovers. / Chapter four in seven parts. Rita Skura has a cat. The human being is a hole in nothingness. After a delay the detective chief superintendent enters the scene) and start to have a point - sometimes they ask a question / sometimes they state a thought to be explored / sometimes they just intrigue. All in all it's at this point that DARK MATTER stops being a slightly darker version of TV's The Big Bang Theory and starts to become a character study of depth, layers and great emotional impact.

All in all I'd have to say, stick with the early part of DARK MATTER. It's not crime fiction just for entertainment, and it's often confusing and slightly odd and there are parts of the book that will make you stop and think, and maybe back-track a bit. But this is crime fiction for thought provocation and boy does it manage to do exactly that. ( )
  austcrimefiction | Aug 6, 2010 |
I wanted to like this but it just seemed to get bogged down in details. It is the story of science and theory of more than one world. I think it was just not my style of book. ( )
1 vote awolfe | Jun 25, 2010 |
Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Zeh, Juliprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Bredenkamp, ChristineTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Colbus, Jean-ClaudeTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Gado Wiener, RobertaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Hébert, BrigitteTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Keteleer, HildeTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Lo, ChristineTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Zoubková, JanaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

"[A] masterfully constructed story of an intense friendship between two physicists, a marriage, a kidnapping, and a murder, In Free Fall plunges the reader into a hyperreality that is as seductive as it is disturbing."

. HTML:"An elegant quasi-thriller about physics, murder, and the solving of murders . . . This is one of the best books of the year. Zeh has enough control to keep the murder from being lurid and the physics from being dull. Her prose is sharp and often witty, and the excellent translation means every moment shines brightly.". HTML:"Engrossing . . . vivid characters combine with a devastating 11th-hour reveal to make a memorable intellectual thirller.". HTML:"A highly cinematic thriller . . . Zeh's smart novel will appeal to a wide range of readers.". HTML:"Add a hospital scandal and two of the quirkiest detectives in fiction, mix with Juli Zeh's thrumming, moody prose, and you have one of the finest crime novels you'll read.". "It is such a delight to watch Juli Zeh play her entire repertoire of literary skill . . . challenging the conventions of the classical detective story with subtle irony.". "Juli Zeh uses the structure of the detective novel like a composer uses his music book. And into this book she writes, with remarkable consistency, her musical score . . . Here's a piece of literature that takes the liberty to develop its very own rules, and to impose them upon an obsolete form, coming indeed very close to a musical work in its tenor and thematic variation . . . One might think that such perfection, such erudition must leave the reader untouched, bored even . . . but it does not. For that, Zeh's labyrinth is built too cleverly; its corridors are adorned with witty elements; her sentences are of extraordinary brilliance.". HTML:"A novel from Juli Zeh's pen is always an adventure, because each of them opens up an entirely new world . . . This is Juli Zeh's unique talent: Her sharp intellect absorbs the most complex issues, including elementary particles; to then put them into words with such playful precision it makes you swoon . . . In Free Fall takes the bird's-eye view, unorthodox, nerve-racking, simply unforgettable--like Hitchcock's masterpiece.". HTML:"In Free Fall is the virtuosic presentation of an amazing narration. Juli Zeh steers through with confidence and ease.". Despite the grisly murder that is central to the story, IN FREE FALL is a twisty mediation about ideas rather than a crime novel, and, as such, is probably better suited to the eye than the ear. That is to take nothing away from narrator Mark Bramhall, who is arid when he needs to be--especially in the philosophical arguments between physicist rivals Sebastian and Oscar--and desperate and despairing when called upon--as Sebastian finds his perfect life headed to ruin. But even the most attentive listener will find it difficult to stay on point as the narrative gives way to Zeh's playful commentary on physics and reality. Those who attempt to listen to this book should be forewarned: It is a work that will require full concentration. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine. HTML:The gripping international bestseller that fuses an ingenious detective tale with stunning, cinematic storytelling—and a provocative riff on quantum physics—from Germany’s foremost young literary talent.
A child is kidnapped but does not know it. One man dies, two physicists fight, and a senior constable falls in love. In the end, everything is different . . . yet exactly the same.” —Prologue
A rising star who has garnered some of Europe’s most important literary prizes, Juli Zeh has established herself as the new master of the philosophical thriller. With In Free Fall, she now takes us on a fast-paced ride through deadly rivalry and love’s infinite configurations.
Against the backdrop of Germany and Switzerland, two physicists begin a dangerous dance of distrust. Friends since their university days, when they were aspiring Nobel Prize candidates, they now interact in an atmosphere of tension, stoked by Oskar’s belief that Sebastian fell into mediocrity by having a family. When Sebastian’s son, Liam, is apparently kidnapped, their fragile friendship is further tested. Entrusted with uncovering the truth, Detective Superintendent Schilf discerns a web of blackmail, while at the same time the reality of his personal life falls into doubt. Unfolding in a series of razor-sharp scenes, In Free Fall is a riveting novel of ideas from a major new literary voice. With the recent success of works in translation, such as Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl Who Played with Fire, Zeh is poised to take off.
From the Hardcover edition..

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