Picture of author.

John G. Cramer

Author of Einstein's Bridge

5+ Works 646 Members 44 Reviews

About the Author

Also includes: John Cramer (1)

Disambiguation Notice:

His novels have been published under the name "John Cramer", but the bulk of his nonfiction writing for periodicals uses the form "John G. Cramer".

Works by John G. Cramer

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Cramer, John Gleason, Jr.
Birthdate
1934-10-24
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Houston, Texas, USA
Places of residence
Seattle, Washington, USA
Westport, New York, USA
Education
Rice University
Occupations
physicist
novelist
professor (Department of Physics ∙ University of Washington ∙ Seattle)
columnist
Relationships
Cramer, Kathryn (daughter)
Organizations
University of Washington (Department of Physics)
Indiana University
American Physical Society
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Short biography
John G. Cramer is Professor Emeritus, Physics, at the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle, where he has had five decades of experience in teaching undergraduate and graduate level physics. He has done cutting-edge research in experimental and theoretical nuclear and ultra-relativistic heavy ion physics,
including active participation in Experiments NA35 and NA49 at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, and the STAR Experiment at RHIC, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Long Island, NY. He has also worked in the foundations of quantum mechanics (QM) and is the originator of QM’s Transactional Interpretation. He served as Director of the University of Washington Nuclear Physics Laboratory from 1983 to 1990, overseeing a major $10,000,000 accelerator construction project.

John has also served on accelerator-laboratory Program Advisory Committees for LAMPF (Los Alamos National Laboratory), NSCL (Michigan State University),
TRIUMF (University of British Columbia), and the 88” Cyclotron (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory). He is a Fellow of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science and of the American Physical Society (APS), was Chair of the APS/DNP Nuclear Science Resources Committee (1979–1982), and served
on the APS Panel on Public Affairs (1998–2003). He presently serves on the External Council of the NIAC innovative-projects program of NASA. John has spent three 15-month sabbaticals in Europe, the first (1971–1972) as Bundesministerium Gastprofessor, Ludwig-Maximillian-Universität-München, Garching, Germany; then (1982–1983) as Gastprofessor, Hahn-Meitner Institut, Berlin; and finally (1994–1995) as Guest Researcher, Max-Planck Institut für Physik, München, with three months of this sabbatical spent at CERN as Experiment NA49 came into operation. He is co-author of almost 300 publications in nuclear and ultra-relativistic heavy ion physics published in peer-reviewed physics journals, as well as over 141 publications in conference proceedings, and has written several chapters for multiauthor books about physics.

John is the author of the award-nominated hard science fiction novels Twistor and Einstein’s Bridge, both published by Avon Books. Twistor is currently available as a Dover reprint and as an e-book from Book View Cafe. Einstein’s Bridge will soon be joined by a new sequel, Fermi’s Question, both to be published
by Tor Books. John is also the author of over 181 popular-level science articles published bimonthly from 1984 to present in his “The Alternate View” columns appearing in Analog Science Fiction and Fact Magazine.

John was born in Houston, Texas on October 24, 1934, and was educated in the Houston Public Schools (Poe, Lanier, Lamar) and at Rice University, where he
received a BA (1957), MA (1959), and Ph.D. (1961) in Experimental Nuclear Physics. He began his professional physics career as a Postdoc and then Assistant
Professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana (1961–1964) before joining the Physics Faculty of the University of Washington. John and his wife Pauline live in the View Ridge neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, with their three Shetland Sheepdogs, MACH-4 Lancelot, MACH Viviane, and Taliesin.
Disambiguation notice
His novels have been published under the name "John Cramer", but the bulk of his nonfiction writing for periodicals uses the form "John G. Cramer".

Members

Reviews

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I love hard science fiction and this book did not disappoint. While the writing is often dry, perhaps staid, the story, the science, is well worth the little bit of extra effort to stay with it.
 
Flagged
icadams | 22 other reviews | Jul 18, 2023 |
Most of this mash-up of Timescape and A for Andromeda is a demonstration on how NOT to write hard SF. Cardboard characters, page-long info-dumps, and eventual decline into rants on how politicians don't understand science. For all the science lectures, and for a novel that involves both quantum phenomena and bubble universes, there's an astonishing lack of sense of scale.

Not recommended.
1 vote
Flagged
ChrisRiesbeck | 17 other reviews | Dec 26, 2019 |
This book shines bright light into the dim recesses of quantum theory, where the mysteries of entanglement, nonlocality, and wave collapse have motivated some to conjure up multiple universes, and others to adopt a "shut up and calculate" mentality. After an extensive and accessible introduction to quantum mechanics and its history, the author turns attention to his transactional model. Using a quantum handshake between normal and time-reversed waves, this model provides a clear visual picture explaining the baffling experimental results that flow daily from the quantum physics laboratories of the world. To demonstrate its powerful simplicity, the transactional model is applied to a collection of counter-intuitive experiments and conceptual problems.… (more)
 
Flagged
Pauline_B | Apr 1, 2018 |
This is quite an interesting book - the basic story is about a couple of university researchers have stumbled on a new electromagnetic effect whilst undertaking some research for the woman's doctoral research.

At first her research advisor doesn't see the point of the new directions of research - his company was suffering financially, and he'd just been threatened by on of his contractors over some, er, dubious research he'd undertaken for them but when some of the implications became clear, he reckons this could be the saviour of his company, but the main researchers had other thoughts! Research should be shared, not put into corporate silos but they don't realise the risks they were putting themselves in. First, it was the bugs in the lab and their advisor's office, then the bungled attempt to steal the tech that left one of the researchers and a colleague's children exiled in another universe! The kidnapping of the second researcher and the advisor succeeded but the kidnappers refused to believe the truth...

The story itself worked quite well and the way that Dr Cramer went about describing the research parts of the story were quite good fun too but some parts of the story depend on computer technology and this story, written in 1987, totally misses any mention of the internet (though Cramer ought to have been aware of its predecessor), and some of the terminology used for the computers is just laughable these days so you find yourself jarred out of the story every so often (the story is set in an undefined 'day after tomorrow')
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
JohnFair | 22 other reviews | Mar 9, 2015 |

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
5
Also by
6
Members
646
Popularity
#39,073
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
44
ISBNs
14

Charts & Graphs