Contacto

by Carl Sagan
Nocover-blank-133x176
Contacto
 
by
Carl Sagan
 
published 2000 by Emece Editores
first published 1997
binding Paperback
isbn 9500417561   (isbn13: 9789500417563)
pages 361
literary awards 1986 Locus Awards Winner (First Novel)
description It is December 1999, the dawn of the millennium, and a team of international scientists is poised for the most fantastic adventure in human history. A...more
date added
02-23-07



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Chris
06/22/08

Read in June, 2008
I can’t say enough good things about the writing of the late Carl Sagan. Previously, the only works of his I had read are his non-fiction works “Cosmos” and “Dragons of Eden”. I didn’t quite know what to expect of his fictional work, though I think I had a few good clues going into it, the first being the fact I’ve seen the film adaptation about fifty times (which I discovered is vastly different than this story, aside from the general, top-level plot) and the second being Sagan...more
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Eric
06/04/08

Read in June, 2008
I enjoyed this book but for once I liked the movie better. I can't believe it. I guess it doesn't help that it is one of my favorite movies ever. And I learned something important from the movie, so it really sticks in my head, holding unfair advantage. Plus it's always a little weird reading a story when you already know how it goes and are unavoidably picking out the parts that differ from the movie.

One thing I will say this book suffers from is thinly veiled soliloquy. It always bugs me w...more
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Fred D.
bookshelves: science-fiction
Read in January, 1990
recommends it for: Anyone
It's funny to me that Dr. Sagan, an avowed atheist, would write a book which included some strong arguments in support of the concept of faith. I really loved this book, though I am religious. It made me think long and hard about many issues surrounding the conflict between science and religion. Though there are many attacks on religion in this book, some of them justified, some of them not, in the end I chose to interpret the book on the whole as a defense of the concept of faith.

It was won...more
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Matthew
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: most people
(pre) discussions on science and religion with an atheist friend in the US led her to give me her battered copy of this. anticipating a good read and will start on it asap.

(post) I quite liked Contact, though it was, especially toward the end, very different from what I expected. I thought Carl Sagan might come down more on the side of science, and at the start, when introducing Ellie the astronomer vs Pastor Rankin the crazy narrow minded evangelist, he was, but toward the end I wasn't real...more
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Rick
05/28/08

Read in May, 2008
If there are intelligent beings elsewhere in the universe, why haven't we received a message from them yet? and what would happen if we actually did? Near the end of Contact we learn Carl Sagan's speculative but quite plausible answer to the first question. The bulk of the book concerns his answers to the second question, which are unfortunately far less satisfying.

Contact suffers from an excess of exposition and from generally weak character development. (Isaac Asimov could ma...more
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Adarsh
03/13/07

Read in December, 2006
recommends it for: Everyone
Contact by Carl Sagan is one of the better works of science fiction dealing with extra terrestrials.

I remember being fascinated reading Sagan's earlier work Cosmos. Flying past the planets of our solar system, a chapter at a time, had excited me as it did the entire world.

When I noticed another book by Sagan at the local library, my expectation rose instantly. As I read the back cover and learned that the book touched the topic of extra terrestrials, I had a vague feeling that Sagan woul...more
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Moire
05/10/08

Read in May, 2008
recommended to Moire by: Sarah Prescott
I really enjoyed Contact, but I couldn't help wishing that I had read it sooner. In high school I was very caught up in the science versus religion debate, and I would have found the discussions between Ellie and Palmer particularly captivating. The last 5-10 years have left me feeling fatigued by the same dried out questions being posed again and again, by the superficial confrontation between science and religion that has played out in the media, by the public misunderstanding of how science...more
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Heather's Mum
bookshelves: sciencefiction
Read in January, 1988
recommends it for: Sagan fans
Short review - huge book.

I liked Sagan and his "billions and billions" charm. I am sorry he is no longer sharing planet earth with us. As with all of his publications, Contact was well written, entertaining & educational. However, it left me wondering if Sagan truly was an agnostic. (or atheist?)

I hate to admit (& regret the fact) that the religious characters in the book do indeed reflect some Christian's attitudes and beliefs. There are times we (Christians) can do...more
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L Greyfort
bookshelves: philosophy, religion, science, science-fiction
Read in January, 1987
"You're god is too small."

The heroine makes this comment about 2/3 of the way through this novel. She is trying to get across the idea that, if your god cannot encompass the knowlege which humans have so laboriously amassed over the millenia (which is only about two teaspoons worth in comparison to the enormity of the universe!), then there is something wrong with the god you've made for yourself.

A lot of what is going on in Sagan's book, it seems to me, is the attempt to ex...more
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jen
06/28/07

bookshelves: romance-time-travel
Read in September, 2001
I'm a closet science fiction fan, although I suppose one has to be in the closet about it to be... in the closet.

ANYWAY, this is one of my all-time favorite books Ever. I think I saw the movie first and despite not really liking it, my interest was piqued by the book... and a big book, too. I really like long, good reads (chalk it up to my early interest in historical romance novels which for the most part - especially early Johanna Lindsey ones, none of her new crap - are long and big... ha...more
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Elliot
01/21/08

bookshelves: sci-fi
This book changed my life when I read it as a nerdy little sixth grader. Ellie Arroway became the strong female role model I needed in my life, and I became determined to be an astronomer when I grew up. I then proceeded to read all of Carl Sagan's nonfiction books one by one to solidify my nerd status.



I fell in love with Contact because it was about more than just Earth receiving a transmission from an alien civilization. Sagan addresses religion and the idea of god severa...more
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Ryan
01/30/08

bookshelves: sci-fi
Read in April, 2002
recommends it for: astronomical lovers
Superb-splendid! i love this book so much! One of the best theme in my lifetime history. Versi bukunya lebih menawan dibanding filmnya.

Ellie Arroway, seorang ilmuwan wanita pada SETI, mendapat transmisi radio dari rasi bintang Vega. Sebuah konsorsium internasional dibentuk untuk memecahkan kode tersebut. Setelah bertahun-tahun ratusan peneliti dari seluruh dunia yang tergabung dalam project argus akhirnya berhasil memecahkan teka-teki yang ternyata adalah sebuah cetak biru mesin yang diduga ...more
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Miss_mimic
Read in May, 2008
I really enjoyed this book. I loved the movie when I saw it years ago, and put the book on my 888 list for my book-to-movie category as one of those books I've always wanted to read but have never got around to. I am so glad that I finally did.

While parts of the story stray widely in the movie, I think that the movie does stay true to the central themes of the book. I think that the parts I miss the most in the movie are the other team members, who make little/no appearance on the big scree...more
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Asil
05/08/07

bookshelves: old-friend, scifi
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in September, 1999
recommends it for: scifi fans, astronomers, geeks and nerds
I read this after my first session at CTY in 1999, and the combination of experiences is largely what set me on the path to becoming an astronomy major at Cornell. I already liked astronomy, but CTY cemented it. Contact has a lot to do with why I came to Cornell specifically. Sagan was here, we operate Arecibo from here... I wanted to be Ellie Arroway when I grew up. I still do.

It's been a while since I read it, but aside from the enormous life-changing effect it had on me, I remember it...more
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Brian Hodges
It ain't like the movie. Not really. Sure the basic plot is still about a supposed alien race making contact and the machine we build that sends somebody out to their planet. But apart from that, this book is basically one long tirade about the value of science over religion. Which is unfortunate. Not that I have any problem with Carl Sagan's proudly noted atheism. It's just that he makes the mistake that a lot of CHRISTIAN authors often make: he stops telling his story to preach his point...more
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Amanda
04/16/07

bookshelves: best-adult
Read in January, 1998
Here's what I wrote when I reread it in 2003:

Contact is a book that is literally science fiction--full of theories about space and time, chemistry, mathematics, all the invisible building blocks of our logical world, yet also full of human emotion, of religious thought, of anguish and love. It's a book about being human and I continually held myself up for comparison, measuring my own responses, forming my own thoughts. I will be lucky if I ever find another book that makes me respond this ...more
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Todd
08/25/07

bookshelves: sci-fi
recommends it for: science lovers
Hey, what do you know, a sci-fi book with real science in it! And let me just add the obligitory "the book is so much better than the movie" sort of comment. Not that I didn't appreciate the movie, I liked it, but yeah you know how these things go.

More than science, though, there were really subtle and clever themes on faith and belief interwoven into the story. This book boasts one of the most stunning (to me) concepts I have ever read in a story. The part at the end when the ...more
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Starlight
bookshelves: pagetopage
Read in January, 2000
For those thinking that this is just another first contact-we come in peace-alien turns bad book, you're in for the shock of your life. You must miss the author's name there, or you have no idea who the guy is.

The late Carl Sagan was a respected scientist, and if he decided to write something about ET, we ought to sit down and read.

I was hooked from the very first page, and kept turning the page until it was over. Contact bravely walked through the thin line of religion against science,...more
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Scott
08/07/07

bookshelves: science-y
Read in January, 1998
recommends it for: anyone!
I drove my high school citas class nuts talking about this book. In fact this mouthy girl I really didn't like brought it up a few years later at a reunion-type thing. I almost cared...

But aside from that, I was obviously impressed and the book ends with a big kick to the head. I really enjoy reading the novel just as a story but it has untold underlying thoughts and ideas. Sagan was an awesome man and I love watching his shows from when America was discovering and thinking about the uni...more
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Holly
04/05/08

Read in February, 2008
Contact is one of my favorite books, period. I wish I had read it when I was in high school, as I think it may have inspired me to dig deeper into mathematics and science instead of being repulsed by them. I really connect with the wonder and beauty of science as presented here. Plus, the figure of a really smart, female scientist would have been fun and exciting for me to read as a kid. Ah well.

I read this book again a month or so ago, making my total reads of it probably around ten times...more
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