5/21/2023 0 Comments Jumper by Steven GouldListen to our complete interview with Gould in Episode 116 of Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy (above). “And if it comes from someplace, where is that, and what’s happening there?” “I’m curious about where the energy comes from for jumping, for tearing holes open between various areas,” says Gould. The answer is yes, which only leads to more questions, and presumably more books. The fourth Jumper book, Exo, explores the question of whether jumping can be used to travel into outer space. Why do Davy’s clothes come with him when he jumps? What happens if he jumps while chained to a wall? What happens to his orbital velocity when he jumps from one latitude to another? The rules laid down in Jumper form the basis for much of what happens in subsequent novels. “Or, ‘This book let me get away, in a way that wasn’t physical, but it let me know there are other people who are having things happen that are comparable to mine, and that they got through them, and they survived, and they had a life afterward.'”Īnother thing that sets Jumper apart is the rigor and consistency with which it explores the idea of teleportation. “I’ve had kids with abusive home lives email me and say, ‘This book saved my life,'” Gould says in Episode 116 of the Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast.
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