How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe Charles Yu's debut novel, How to Life Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, could be described as a story about contemporary family life...
How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe
Charles Yu's debut novel, How to Life Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, could be described as a story about contemporary family life disguised as science fiction. It concerns a young man who has spent most of the past decade in a small time machine in his job as a time machine repairman. He makes calls on people who have rented time machines for recreational purposes but have become stuck in time and must be rescued by him. As the novel progresses, it is revealed that this man's name is the same as that of the author, Charles Yu. The protagonist is a lonely and rather sad fellow, who spends much of his non-working hours drifting along in his capsule, thinking about his past and his parents, especially his father who disappeared long ago. Accompanied only by his dog and a computer that has the pixilated face of a female and a cartoon-like voice, Charles hopes to one day locate his father in some alternate universe to which he apparently has traveled in a time machine. Charles's parents, a few clients, and several street performers are the only other humans that he encounters during the course of the story. He makes one trip to a city in Minor Universe 31, a residential and entertainment world made mostly from a science fiction "substrate," where the company for which he works is headquartered. His objective is to have maintenance work done on his time machine and when he goes to pick it up, he encounters his future self. Panicking, he draws his service revolver and shoots his future self in the stomach, just as his future self is attempting to tell him that the key is the book. He has no idea what this means as he stumbles into his time machine and races away. On the capsule's console, he finds a manual-type book that has the same title as the novel.
With the help of his computer, he realizes that he must read the book and make amendments and additions to it as he goes along. At some point in the future, he must give the completed book to his past self, who then will shoot him and begin the rewriting process again in an endless cycle. Charles realizes he has become stuck in a time loop. By the rules of time travel, if he changes anything that happens during this loop, he risks entering an alternate universe from which he might not emerge. Under the circumstances, escaping the time loop appears to be extremely difficult. He may be doomed to spend the rest of his life in the time machine, writing the book, giving it to himself, shooting himself, and starting the cycle again. The book is a manual about time travel, but it also offers advice on how such a traveler should live within or use time wisely. The main use of Charles's time is in thinking about his father and mother, but he begins visiting periods in his past in his time machine, watching his younger self interact with his parents. Eventually, he discovers that the book given to him by his future self is literally the key, because it holds a key that unlocks a box that his mother gave him, inside of which his father left clues to where he went in time. This inspires Charles to realize that he can break out of his time loop through the power of his mind and memory. He does so and rescues his father from the past time in which he is stuck. As the novel ends, it looks as if the family has a chance to regain normalcy and move forward with a better understanding of how to cope with the difficulties of life by facing the problems of the past with courage and honesty.
Praise
âGlittering layers of gorgeous and playful meta-science-fiction. . . . Like [Douglas] Adams, Yu is very funny, usually proportional to the wildness of his inventions, but Yuâs sound and fury conceal (and construct) this novelâs dense, tragic, all-too-human heart. . . . Yu is a superhero of rendering human consciousness and emotion in the language of engineering and science. . . . A complex, brainy, genre-hopping joyride of a story, far more than the sum of its component parts, and smart and tragic enough to engage all regions of the brain and body.â
âThe New York Times Book Review
âCompulsively rereadable. . . . Hilarious. . . . Yu has a crisp, intermittently lyrical prose style, one thatâs comfortable with both math and sadness, moving seamlessly from delirious metafiction to the straight-faced prose of instruction-manual entries. . . . [The book itself] is like Steve Jobsâ ultimate hardware fetish, a dreamlike amalgam of functionality and predetermination.â
âLos Angeles Times
âDouglas Adams and Philip K. Dick are touchstones, but Yuâs sense of humor and narrative splashes of colorâespecially when dealing with a pretty solitary life and the bittersweet search for his father, a time travel pioneer who disappearedâset him apart within the narrative spaces of his own horizontal design. . . . A clever little story that will be looped in your head for days. No doubt it will be made into a movie, but letâs hope that doesnât take away the heart.â
âAustin Chronicle
âIf How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe contented itself with exploring that classic chestnut of speculative fiction, the time paradox, it would likely make for an enjoyable sci-fi yarn. But Yuâs novel is a good deal more ambitious, and ultimately more satisfying, than that. Itâs about time travel and cosmology, yes, but itâs also about language and narrative â the more we learn about Minor Universe 31, the more it resembles the story space of the novel weâre reading, which is full of diagrams, footnotes, pages left intentionally (and meaningfully) blank and brief chapters from the ownerâs manual of our narratorâs time machine. . . . . Yu grafts the laws of theoretical physics onto the yearnings of the human heart so thoroughly and deftly that the bookâs technical language and mathematical proofs take on a sense of urgency.â
âNPR
âHow to Live Safely is a book likely to generate a lot of discussion, within science fiction and outside, infuriating some readers while delighting many others.â
âSan Francisco Chronicle
âAn extraordinary work. . . . I read the entire book in one gulp.â
âChris Wallace, GQ
âA great Calvino-esque thrill ride of a book.â
âThe Stranger
âScience and metaphor get nice and cozy in Charles Yuâs How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe. The novel joins the likes of Gary Shteyngartâs Super Sad True Love Story and Jillian Weiseâs The Colony, fiction that borrows the tropes of sci-fi to tell high-tech self-actualization narratives.â
âPortland Mercury
âA brainy reverie of sexbots, rayguns, time travel and Buddhist zombie mothers. . . . Packed with deft emotional insight.â
âThe Economist
âA funny, funny book, and itâs a good thing, too; because at its heart itâs a book about loneliness, regret, and the all-too-human desire to change the past.â
âTor.com
âA keenly perceptive satire. . . . Yuâs novel is also a meditation on the essentials of human life at its innermost point.. . . Campy allusions to the original Star Wars trilogy, a cityscape worthy of the directorâs cut of Blade Runner and a semi-coherent vocabulary of techno-jargon cement these disparate elements into a brilliant send-up of science fiction. . . . Perhaps it would be better to think of the instructional units of How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe in terms of the chapters of social commentary which John Steinbeck placed into the plot structure of The Grapes of Wrath.â
âCalifornia Literary Review
âHow to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe is the rare book I pick up to read the first several pages, then decide to drop everything and finish at once. Emotionally resonant, funny, and as clever as any book I have read all year, this debut novel heralds the arrival of a talented young writer unafraid to take chances.â
âlargehearted boy
âA wild and inventive first novel . . . has been compared to the novels of Kurt Vonnegut Jr. and Jonathan Lethem, and the fact that such comparisons are not out of line says everything necessary about Yuâs talent and future.â
âPortland Oregonian
âBends the rules of time and literary convention.â
âSeattle Weekly
âGetting stuck with Yu in his time loop is like watching an episode of Doctor Who as written by the young Philip Roth. Even when recalling his most painful childhood moments, Yu makes fun of himself or pulls you into a silly description of fake physics experiments. In this way, he delivers one of the most clear-eyed descriptions of consciousness Iâve seen in literature: Itâs full of self-mockery and self-deception, and yet somehow manages to keep its hands on the wheel, driving us forward into an unknowable future. How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe is intellectually demanding, but also emotionally rich and funny. . . . Itâs clearly the work of a scifi geek who knows how to twist pop culture tropes into melancholy meditations on the nature of consciousness.â
âio9
âFunny [and] moving. . . . Charles Yuâs first novel is getting ready for lift-off, and it more than surpasses expectations which couldnât be any higher after he was given the 5 Under 35 Award . . . How to Live Safely in a Science Fiction Universe is one of the trippiest and most thoughtful novels Iâve read all year, one that begs for a single sit-down experience even if youâre left with a major head rush after the fact for having gulped down so many ideas in a solitary swoop. . . . Yuâs literary pyrotechnics come in a marvelously entertaining and accessible package, featuring a reluctant, time machine-operating hero on a continual quest to discover what really happened to his missing father, a mysterious book possibly answering all, and a computer with the most idiosyncratic personality since HAL or Deep Thought. . . . Like the work of Richard Powers . . . How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe fuses the scientific and the emotional in ways that bring about something new.â
âSarah Weinman, The Daily Beast
âOne of the best novels of 2010. . . . It is a wonderfully stunning, brilliant work of science fiction that goes to the heart of self-realization, happiness and connections. . . . Yu has accomplished something remarkable in this book, blending science fiction universes with his own, alternative selfâs life, in a way, breaking past the bonds of the page and bringing the reader right into the action. . . . Simply, this is one of the absolute best time travel stories . . . even compared to works such as The Time Machine by H.G. Wells or the Doctor Who television series.â
âSF Signal
âWithin a few pages I was hooked. . . . There are times when he starts off a paragraph about chronodiegetics that just sounds like pseudo-scientific gibberish meant to fill in some space. And then you realize that what heâs saying actually makes sense, that heâs actually figured out something really fascinating about the way time works, about the way fiction works, and the âAha!â switch in your brain gets flipped. That happened more than once for me. There are so many sections here and there that I found myself wanting to share with somebody: Hereâread this paragraph! Look at this sentence! Ok, now check this out!â
âGeekDad, Wired.com
âIn this debut novel, Charles Yu continues his ambitious exploration of the fantastic with a whimsical yet sincere tribute to old-school science fiction and quantum physics. . . . A fascinating, philosophical and disorienting thriller about life and the context that gives it meaning.â
âKirkus, starred review
âWith Star Wars allusions, glimpses of a future world, and journeys to the past, as well as hilarious and poignant explanations of âchronodiegetics,â or the âtheory of the nature and function of time within a narrative space,â Yu, winner of the National Book Foundationâs 5 under 35 Award, constructs a clever, fluently metaphorical tale. A funny, brain-teasing, and wise take on archetypal father-and-son issues, the mysteries of time and memory, emotional inertia, and one sweet but bumbling misfitâs attempts to escape a legacy of sadness and isolation.â
âBooklist
âThis book is cool as hell. If I could go back in time and read it earlier, I would.â
âColson Whitehead, author of Sag Harbor
âCharles Yu is a tremendously clever writer, and How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe is marvelously written, sweetly geeky, good clean time-bending fun.â
âAudrey Niffenegger, author of Her Fearful Symmetry and The Time Travelerâs Wife
âFunny, touching, and weirdly beautiful. This book is awesome.â
âNick Harkaway, author of The Gone-Away World
âHow to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe is that rare thingâa truly original novel. Charles Yu has built a strange, beautiful, intricate machine, with a pulse that carries as much blood as it does electricity.â
âKevin Brockmeier, author of The View from the Seventh Layer and The Brief History of the Dead
âPoignant, hilarious, and electrically original. Bends time, mind, and genre.â
âDavid Eagleman, author of Sum