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The book draws on the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics which posits that every possible outcome of every event creates a new universe or world that runs parallel to our own. [1] [2] Dark Matter received mixed reviews from critics, and was nominated for the 2016 World Technology Awards. [3]
Dark Matter is the title of a 1990 science fiction novel by Canadian writer Garfield Reeves-Stevens. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It involves mystery, horror, and physics, and was first published by Doubleday in September 1990.
William Blake Crouch (born October 15, 1978) is an American author known for books such as Dark Matter, Recursion, Upgrade, and his Wayward Pines Trilogy, which was adapted into a television series in 2015. Dark Matter was adapted for television in 2024.
Eric Brown of The Guardian described the book as "a spellbinding read" and "the kind of subtly unsettling, understated ghost story MR James might have written had he visited the Arctic." [3] Dark Matter was nominated for a Shirley Jackson Award for best novel. [4] Paver includes a number of references to the author Robert Louis Stevenson.
The second book in the Dark Matter series, Dark Matter: Reading the Bones (2004), won the World Fantasy Award for Best Anthology in 2005. A forthcoming third book in the series is tentatively named Dark Matter: Africa Rising. This was finally published at the end of 2022 under the title Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction, from Tor ...
Dark Matter, a 2007 novel by Juli Zeh; Dark Matter (Paver novel), a 2010 novel by Michelle Paver; Dark Matter (Crouch novel), a 2016 novel by Blake Crouch; Dark Matter (prose anthologies), an anthology series of science fiction, fantasy, and horror by writers of African descent; Dark Matter, a comic book series
Other films that now carry on-screen content messages include "Lady and the Tramp," "Jungle Book," "Dumbo" and "Swiss Family Robinson." Show comments Advertisement
In 2000, Dark•Matter won the Origins Awards for Best Graphic Presentation of a Roleplaying Game, Adventure, or Supplement of 1999. [5] In a review in the February 2000 issue of InQuest Gamer, Dan Joyce stated that Dark•Matter is "one of the best campaign settings" ever published by Wizards of the Coast and its subsidiary TSR, Inc. [1]