tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-71876415674613873202024-02-20T20:35:16.349-06:00SFF MasterworksUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger69125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-6467934064271855982011-07-23T13:44:00.000-05:002011-07-23T13:44:56.574-05:00SF Masterworks #22: Michael Moorcock, Behold the Man<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSNvQWqRm4NYJB13385eUwCmfc3nycW3m6b2We_phyphenhyphenvLBBow8B_N4RgmH4IAbwhr9iq8Sf6pX6Ezt3qW744CZ7hnIcLb7b9Ltc762PqzLhWAnlQAe8ZKPb0Qmglq5IBbZoBbSA3XwdEFs/s1600/Behold+the+Man.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjSNvQWqRm4NYJB13385eUwCmfc3nycW3m6b2We_phyphenhyphenvLBBow8B_N4RgmH4IAbwhr9iq8Sf6pX6Ezt3qW744CZ7hnIcLb7b9Ltc762PqzLhWAnlQAe8ZKPb0Qmglq5IBbZoBbSA3XwdEFs/s320/Behold+the+Man.jpg" width="200" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">Our Father which art in heaven...<br />
<br />
He had been brought up, like most of his schoolfellows, paying a certain lip-service to the Christian religion. Prayers in the mornings at school. He had taken to saying two prayers at night. One was the Lord's Prayer and the other went God bless Mummy, God bless Daddy, God bless my sisters and brothers and all the dear people that surround me, and God bless me. Amen. That had been taught to him by a woman who looked after him for a while when his mother was at work. He had added to this a list of 'thank-yous' ('Thank you for a lovely day, thank you for getting the history questions right...') and 'sorrys' ('Sorry I was rude to Molly Turner, sorry I didn't own up to Mr Matson...'). He had been seventeen years old before he had been able to get to sleep without saying the ritual prayers and even then it had been his impatience to masturbate that had finally broken the habit.<br />
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Our Father which art in heaven... (p. 9)</blockquote><br />
Regardless of how one feels about the issue, the image of the Passion of the Christ strikes at the hearts of those who behold it in art, cinema, poetry, or even prose. A Man (God?) hanging from the crossbeams, arms lashed in place with nails through the hands (wrists) and feet. The agony on his face contrasted with the taunting or mournful crowd. How could such a person endure that pain? Why would he <i>choose</i> such a punishment, if such a thing could ever be "chosen" in the first place? The Passion has left an indelible mark on European and some Asian and African cultures. <i>Ecce homo</i> – behold the man, indeed.<br />
<br />
Michael Moorcock in his 1969 short novel, <i>Behold the Man</i>, explores the psychological rationale that could lead to the imitation of the Passion. Karl Glogauer, who time travels back to the Palestine of the Christ's ministry and execution, is beset with a range of issues ranging from his parents' divorce to the near-pathological association of his faults and desires with the symbolism of the cross. Moorcock alternates between showing Glogauer in the "present" of Palestine and the "past" of mid-20th century England. We experience his trials and tribulations, his struggles with women, his sinking into a sort of messiah-complex where he sees himself as reliving the agonies of the Passion, all in flashbacks that occur around the events in Palestine.<br />
<br />
It would be easy to view this story as a simple denunciation of the faith people put in their religions. After all, the Jesus of this story is not the Christ of Catholic/Orthodox Masses or Protestant worship services. Glogauer is weak and possibly demented – could this be seen as a commentary on those who are devout? While some might think this is so, evidence from the novel indicates something else is occurring. Glogauer is a sympathetically-drawn character; one cannot help but to feel at least some pity on him as he struggles to deal with the neuroses that afflict him. He is a dynamic character whose ultimate transformation causes the reader to consider not just him but the entire origins of the Christian faith.<br />
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Moorcock's story would not work without Jungian psychology being utilized to develop Glogauer's character. He feels "real" because his foibles, his little triumphs, and his despairs are described so well that readers may find themselves being reminded of their own histories. Add to this a narrative that flows almost seamlessly from the "past" and "present" and the story works because it does not get bogged down in the mechanics of the time travel or the nature of the conflicts within Glogauer. While some perhaps would have loved more elaboration, such would only serve to weaken the story with unnecessary digressions; the story works toward an iconic moment and that moment is largely realized because there is no extraneous detail or explanation.<br />
<br />
Yet this is not to say that there are times where things seem to be left unsaid a bit too much. Glogauer's failed relationships with women seem at times to flow into one another without much differentiation between them. While there is character development, at times, especially toward the end, he shifts too much toward his ultimate role without much in the way of plausible development. Although it would, as I state above, weaken the narrative to develop the backstory much beyond what is presented here, the occasional transitionary stage during the Palestine scenes might have made the whole even stronger than what was achieved.<br />
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Despite these faults, <i>Behold the Man</i> ends with a powerful scene that is easily among Moorcock's best. It is not a pathetic, wretched event that we witness, but rather a transformative one that serves to unite Glogauer's fears and obsessions into a moving commentary that makes this book a true masterwork of science fiction. It does not matter if you believe in the Passion or whether you are skeptical that there was even a human named Jesus in the first place. <i>Behold the Man</i> asks the reader to do precisely that and in the act of beholding, something occurs that makes this conclusion one of the more memorable ones. Highly recommended.</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-84445087701237744522011-07-03T18:21:00.000-05:002011-07-03T18:21:42.221-05:00SF Masterworks #90: Clifford D. Simak, City<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgxPE_lNeLPzuYBYhLzfps0sVKjtLmd9K9YQv-Pg7nCEIxcdUFTau-HLuT6BvVnHZKfvrTLh_IBzMRiLsJWYB-Ecd9IgewKnc-ynTJxq5aI195ChefAsYo3PvyrnIgmzAISoCbmpecILkI/s1600/City.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgxPE_lNeLPzuYBYhLzfps0sVKjtLmd9K9YQv-Pg7nCEIxcdUFTau-HLuT6BvVnHZKfvrTLh_IBzMRiLsJWYB-Ecd9IgewKnc-ynTJxq5aI195ChefAsYo3PvyrnIgmzAISoCbmpecILkI/s320/City.jpg" width="210" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">"Not a park, exactly," explained Henry Adams. "A memorial, rather. A memorial to an era of communal life that will be forgotten in another hundred years. A preservation of a number of peculiar types of construction that arose to suit certain conditions and each man's particular tastes. No slavery to any conditions and each man's particular tastes. No slavery to any architectural concepts, but an effort made to achieve better living. In another hundred years men will walk through those houses down there with the same feeling of respect and awe they have when they go into a museum today. It will be to them something out of what amounts to a primeval age, a stepping-stone on the way to the better, fuller life. Artists will spend their lives transferring those old houses to their canvases. Writers of historical novels will come here for the breath of authenticity." (p. 35)</blockquote><br />
American writer Clifford D. Simak's <i>City</i> is a notable example of the "fix-up novel": a series of formerly independent, although similar in some aspects to the others, narratives that are meshed together by some sort of framing element to make a quasi-novel out of short fictions. At times, these "fix-ups" work well: Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s <i>A Canticle for Leibowitz</i> perhaps is one of the best-known and loved examples of this. However, there can be weaknesses that crop up when forcing short fictions into a larger whole. Sometimes, narrative energy is dispersed and the creaky edges of each individual story segment reveal quite clearly the spot welding applied to the narrative seams. <i>City</i> unfortunately is less than the sum of its part.<br />
<br />
<i>City</i> is divided into eight stories woven together with short framing sections. Stretching over 12,000 years, from the then-near future (the 1990s) to a distant future in which sentient, speaking dogs have replaced humans as the dominant mammalian species, these stories explore issues of longing for peaceful interaction. Humans fade away over the course of these stories. They leave their earthly burdens for a transfigured life as Lopers on Jupiter. It is a quietly depressing theme, one that is borne out over the course of these stories.<br />
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There is a museum-like quality to these narratives. Oh, not the purposeful type, as is quoted above, but rather there is a sense of withdrawing, a placing of human achievement off to the side, at first to be admired by progeny that have left the crumbling tumult of cities for a simpler, more pastoral life. One such family, the Websters, are seen at various points over the course of these stories, along with a near-immortal mutant and a robotic servant. As the stories progress, a quiet sense of despair becomes apparent. Here, escape is idealized - humans leave Earth for a paradise, at the cost of their own humanity. The dogs are left to battle with sentient ants, with a further increase in a sort of entropic torpor that persists until the final epilogue appears to sputter like a dampened roman candle.<br />
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For some, these stories build up one another to create a rather damning commentary on human life and our propensity for dreaming even as we obliterate all that we supposedly hold dear. There is something to that, as there is that growing disillusionment with the waking world that is present throughout the generations of Websters and those associated with them. Yet many, and I am one of them, will find themselves dissatisfied with it. The stories feel muted, robbed of potential narrative power because there is no conflict when one side just surrenders and fades away into oblivion. <br />
<br />
This is only compounded by the herky-jerky nature of this particular fix-up. With only a few recurring characters, there is little connecting these stories. By the time one reads 25-30 pages, one story has faded and one gets to experience another iteration of Simak's theme of disillusioning escapism, only with other characters. There is no sense of depth here, likely due to the lack of apparent conflict or narrative tension. The simplicity of the narrative/societal fade to black has as its downside the lack of narrative energy; what's the point of caring about any of this when it is clear from the very beginning that there is so little to do other than to shrug one's shoulders?<br />
<br />
<i>City</i> may have held an appeal for those readers from the 1940s-1980 that read these tales, but today it is hard to laud a work in which the theme is rather stark, the characters mere ciphers, and prose that is merely serviceable. There is little to recommend it to those who want something more challenging than a simple capitulation to extinction. It is a work that may intrigue some, but it lacks anything in the way of narrative energy that would leave readers pondering its message long after the final page is turned. <i>City</i> is merely a competent work, not anything worthy of being preserved for future generations of SF readers. It is one of the weakest choices in the SF Masterworks series.<br />
<br />
</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-49110163928826482332011-07-02T22:44:00.002-05:002011-07-02T22:44:44.113-05:00SF Masterworks #83: Joanna Russ, The Female Man<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgro6_V0aYjFso-voP6iOctKOofMYWz1oCGQKRX8bvDLVLXYuCTkt22eoJDVORePHP-KpkQJSawvTUdJhTfBBPuP_99TbwdnUxV7ihVdZPEDzlP6JWXCe8DAByiyV8JfOorBKhGVi9HqsQ/s1600/The+Female+Man.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgro6_V0aYjFso-voP6iOctKOofMYWz1oCGQKRX8bvDLVLXYuCTkt22eoJDVORePHP-KpkQJSawvTUdJhTfBBPuP_99TbwdnUxV7ihVdZPEDzlP6JWXCe8DAByiyV8JfOorBKhGVi9HqsQ/s320/The+Female+Man.jpg" width="200" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">When Janet Evason returned to the New Forest and the experimenters at the Pole Station were laughing their heads off (for it was not a dream) I sat in a cocktail party in mid-Manhattan. I had just changed into a man, me, Joanna. I mean a female man, of course; my body and soul were exactly the same.<br />
<br />
So there's me also. (p. 5)</blockquote><br />
Joanna Russ' 1975 novel, <i>The Female Man</i>, still contains the power to provoke reflective thoughts and, in many cases, strong emotional responses thirty-six years after its initial release. Even today, many of the gender issues which she raises in this highly influential novel spark debates (as witnessed in the recent round of debates over the role of female authors in SF and the perceived need for greater visibility; one such response leading to the creation of the "<a href="http://asknicola.blogspot.com/2011/06/taking-russ-pledge.html">Russ Pledge</a>" to discuss female SF writers more frequently) over female participation in fields that may formerly (or currently?) be seen as male domains. It is a touchy topic for some to approach the discussion of second-wave feminist critiques, particularly if the reviewer is male, but it is much worse for anyone, regardless of gender, to shy away from exploring a work that explodes discriminatory myths in a complex, wide-ranging narrative.<br />
<br />
<i>The Female Man</i> fragments its narrative among four female narrators from parallel worlds: Janet, who comes from the all-female world of Whileaway (a portentous name) where men died from a plague 800 years prior to the events of the novel; Jeannie, a librarian who lives in an alt-US society where the Great Depression has never ended and where women are defined by their marriageability rather than by their talents; Joanna, a 1970s feminist who emulates certain "masculine" qualities in order to succeed in a chauvinist world as the titular "female man;" and Jael, a warrior in a world where men and women openly war with one another. As the story expands from Janet's initial visit to Jeannine's world and then Joanna's, there begins to emerge a mosaic representation of the struggles that women have had to endure: from the catcalls to engrained views of "feminine" and "masculine" roles to subconscious reactions to certain triggers found in quotidian life. Each character gives voice to these issues, sometimes in a direct fashion, such as the one Joanna gives in Part Six:<br />
<blockquote><br />
<div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">I live between worlds. Half the time I like doing housework. I care a lot about how I look, I warm up to men and flirt beautifully (I mean I really admire them, though I'd die before I took the initiative; that's men's business), I don't press my point in conversations, and I enjoy cooking. I like to do things for other people, especially male people. I sleep well, wake up on the dot, and dont dream. There's only one thing wrong with me.</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">I'm frigid.</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">In my other incarnation I live out such a plethora of conflict that you wouldn't think I'd survive, would you, but I do; I wake up enraged, go to sleep in numbed despair, face what I know perfectly well is condescension and abstract contempt, get into quarrels, shout, fret about people I don't even know, live as if I were the only woman in the world trying to buck it all, work like a pig, strew my whole apartment with notes, articles, manuscripts, books, get frowsty, don't care, become stridently contentious, sometimes laugh and weep within five minutes together out of pure frustration. It takes me two hours to get to sleep and an hour to wake up. I dream at my desk. I dream all over the place. I'm very badly dressed.</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">But O how I relish my victuals! And O how I fuck! (p. 110)</div></blockquote><br />
This quote, along with the first one, represents much of the conflict found within the novel. <i>The Female Man</i> works not only as an excellent SF novel of exploring female identity, but also it serves as an influential work of social commentary that takes as its base a fundamentally Marxist view of society, replete with superstructures and class conflict, and fuses it with second-wave feminist concerns about representation and social equality. It is not a cheery novel; fights rarely are graceful or polite. No, <i>The Female Man</i> stridently argues its points in short, sharp, angry bursts that shake readers' preconceptions of gender roles.<br />
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This can generate confusion and awkwardness, as each gender group struggles to reconfigure their group views on what is "proper." A male holding a door open for a woman might not be polite (unless he does this for fellow males, perhaps), but instead someone who is subconsciously reinforcing social views that hold women in an inferior, "delicate" role in which the males are to be the chivalrous protectors of feminine dignity. As the four narrators traverse their worlds and see the insidiousness of sexism in a variety of guides, a commonality begins to emerge that links their disparate roles and actions into a thematic whole.<br />
<br />
<i>The Female Man</i> is not without its weak points, however. The stridency that makes its points vividly can also be construed as being too full of anger to reflect fully the range of social interactions between males and females and female responses to the world around them. Many readers, male and female alike, may find Russ' approach to be too stark, too black-and-white for the early 21st century (indeed, third-wave feminism has moved away from several of the approaches championed by second-wave activists). This is said not to gainsay what Russ has created, but rather to note that powerful works often do create reactions against the work as well as those in favor of it. If anything, this is a greater testimony to the influence that <i>The Female Man</i> still possesses over people, female and male alike, and this makes <i>The Female Man</i> one of the most essential fictions ever produced in the late 20th century.</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-1606682344156565502011-07-02T19:23:00.000-05:002011-07-02T19:23:19.886-05:00SF Masterworks #93: Karel Čapek, R.U.R. and War with the Newts<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrPU1abxXg9fl_aDGX88IGONlVo2w6K49XcYJq0WBHtoGgIctSOZRzrRShrL7h3ntBqHyEBh7H2A2G1tTSC5DeEJmWMyiepnWvK267wx21-I61WgfN6DuD7YNM7pi_ZpSOPooYYkWnoJ8/s1600/RUR+and+War+with+the+Newts.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrPU1abxXg9fl_aDGX88IGONlVo2w6K49XcYJq0WBHtoGgIctSOZRzrRShrL7h3ntBqHyEBh7H2A2G1tTSC5DeEJmWMyiepnWvK267wx21-I61WgfN6DuD7YNM7pi_ZpSOPooYYkWnoJ8/s320/RUR+and+War+with+the+Newts.jpg" width="209" /></a></div> <b>R.U.R.</b><br />
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Say the word "robot" today and people are most likely to envision a metallic entity, maybe humanoid in shape but not necessarily so, that may be programmed to protect human life or, conversely, to destroy it. But if you had said the word "roboti" in say 1920 in what is now the Czech Republic, very different images would be conjured. It would not be of an entity, but rather verbiage denoting drudgery and slave labor. It is due to Czech writer Karel Čapek's 1920 play, <i>R.U.R.</i> that the descriptor "roboti" morphed into the noun "robot" and spread far and wide from its Czech roots, altering in meaning along the way.<br />
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Čapek was one of the leading Central European writers in the aftermath of World War I. His fiction, the most prominent of which were <i>R.U.R.</i> and the 1936 novel <i>The War with the Newts</i>, often employed allegories to address issues such as the treatment of the workers, the rise of fascism, and the dangers of violent proletarian revolution. Although <i>The War with the Newts.</i> may be the technically better work of the two, <i>R.U.R. </i>contains a power of its own that can still move readers (and even more, play viewers) ninety years after its initial release.<br />
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The story is divided into three acts and a short epilogue, spanning ten years in length. At some indeterminate time in the twentieth century, the scientist Rossum (whose name appears to be taken from a Czech word for "reason") has experimented with biological material to create sentient beings who lack the demands that cause human labor to be so high. Here, Harry Domin, General Manager of Rossum's Universal Robots, explains to Helena Glory (his future wife) how the robots came to be:<br />
<br style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;" /> <br />
<blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><b>Domin:</b> Well, any one who has looked into human anatomy will have seen at once that man is too complicated, and that a good engineer could make him more simply. So young Rossum began to overhaul anatomy and tried to see what could be left out or simplified. In short - but this isn't boring you, Miss Glory?<br />
<br />
<b>Helena:</b> No indeed. You're - it's awfully interesting.<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> So young Rossum said to himself: "A man is something that feels happy, plays the piano, likes going for a walk, and in fact, wants to do a whole lot of things that are really unnecessary."<br />
<br />
<b>Helena:</b> Oh.<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> That are unnecessary when he wants, let us say, to weave or count. Do you play the piano?<br />
<br />
<b>Helena:</b> Yes.<br />
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<b>Domin:</b> That's good. But a working machine must not play the piano, must not feel happy, must not do a whole lot of other things. A gasoline motor must not have tassels or ornaments, Miss Glory. And to manufacture artificial workers is the same thing as to manufacture gasoline motors. The process must be of the simplest, and the product of the best from a practical point of view. What sort of worker do you think is the best from a practical point of view?<br />
<br />
<b>Helena:</b> What?<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> What sort of worker do you think is the best from a practical point of view?<br />
<br />
<b>Helena:</b> Perhaps the one who is most honest and hardworking.<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> No; the one that is the cheapest. The one whose requirements are the smallest. Young Rossum invented a worker with the minimum amount of requirements. He had to simplify him. He rejected everything that did not contribute directly to the progress of work - everything that makes man more expensive. In fact, he rejected man and made the Robot. My dear Miss Glory, the Robots are not people. Mechanically they are more perfect than we are, they have an enormously developed intelligence, but they have no soul. (pp. 5-6)</blockquote><br />
Consider this exchange in light of the immediate post-World War I years. Mass production has come to dominate matters, requiring workers who can do repetitive tasks quickly and efficiently. Economies of scale are beginning to emerge, with "overhead" needing to be eliminated whenever possible in order to lower costs, both production and retail alike. Workers do not want to work for low wages; general strikes had begun to emerge a generation before. And looming like a black cloud is the self-proclaimed proletarian state that the Bolsheviks were in the midst of establishing in Russia in 1920. In many senses, the "robots" of this story, produced from biological material and designed to be docile, work-oriented bio-machines, are but an analogue for the envisioned "perfect" worker, one that would do the drudgery docilely and not demand too much in exchange.<br />
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But these robots are too alien for the likes of Domin. Over a span of ten years, he tinkers with Rossum's formula in an attempt to create a robot more akin to humans. What he unleashes is a maelstrom, as the engineered robots come to see humans not as masters, but as imperfect mechanisms that must be destroyed. The Robots rise up in their own form of a proletarian revolt:<br />
<br style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;" /> <blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><b>Dr. Gall:</b> What happened?<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> Damnation!<br />
<br />
<b>Fabry: </b>Bear in mind that the <i>Amelia</i> brought whole bales of these leaflets. No other cargo at all.<br />
<br />
<b>Hallemeier:</b> What? But it arrived on the minute.<br />
<br />
<b>Fabry:</b> The Robots are great on punctuality. Read it, Domin.<br />
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<b>Domin:</b> {<i>Reads handbill</i>} "Robots throughout the world: We, the first international organization of Rossum's Universal Robots, proclaim man as our enemy, and an outlaw in the universe." Good heavens, who taught them these phrases?<br />
<br />
<b>Dr. Gall:</b> Go on.<br />
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<b>Domin:</b> They say they are more highly developed than man, stronger and more intelligent. That man's their parasite. Why, it's absurd.<br />
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<b>Fabry: </b>Read the third paragraph.<br />
<br />
<b>Domin:</b> "Robots throughout the world, we command you to kill all mankind. Spare no men. Spare no women. Save factories, railways, machinery, mines, and raw materials. Destroy the rest. Then return to work. Work must not be stopped." (p. 34)</blockquote><br />
This development parallels that of the newts in <i>The War with the Newts</i>. Humans think they can master and control other sentient life, only to discover that resentment builds to the point of violent revolt against human rule. Viewed in light of the events transpiring between 1917 and 1939, Čapek's works could be viewed as an indictment of the industrial capitalist system. But Čapek is not a socialist sympathizer. In both works and especially here in <i>R.U.R.</i>, he takes great pains to show the follies of the revolting side. The robots do "triumph," and all but one menial laborer, Alquist, are killed. There are no more humans. However, the robots cannot replicate themselves and they try and force Alquist to recreate Rossum's success in vat-producing biological robots. He fails, but in the midst of these experiments of dissection and testing, it is discovered that two robots, Primus and the robot copy of Helena, have evolved the ability to love, an extraneous feature in robots, but essential in human beings. The play ends with the hope that these two will be the new Adam and Eve for a self-replicating humano-robot species.<br />
<br />
Čapek's works are often fraught with this mixture of the dark and the vaguely hopeful. It is perhaps part of the <i>esprit du temps</i>, to be horror-stricken at the massive changes and devastation wrought by the Great War, but Čapek's works still resonate strongly today because we can easily sense our own faults, follies, and hopes within his characters and their situations. Although <i>R.U.R.</i> does not contain the layers of meaning that <i>The War with the Newts</i> possesses, it certainly is a major achievement in interwar theater, one that still possesses vitality even today.<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>War with the Newts</b><br />
<br />
More than any other century, the 20th century (and particularly its first half) is known for its dystopic novels. In an age of great upheaval brought about first by the calamitous Great War/World War I, which gave rise to the Bolshevik Revolution, Fascism, National Socialism, and the conflicts these three daughter movements caused, so much faith in the almost holy notion of "progress" was lost. Whether one looks at Zamyatin's <i>We</i>, Huxley's <i>Brave New World</i>, or Orwell's <i>Animal Farm</i> and <i>1984</i>, the effects of this disillusionment are widely evident. Technology is treacherous, at least as prone to betrayal as the humans surrounding the books' protagonists. There is a vague menace in each of these books, as if "progress" was the Edenic apple being offered by the totalitarian ruler/serpent. The palpable sense of fear and worry that radiates throughout these texts makes for exciting, troublesome reads.<br />
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Czech writer Karel Čapek wrote in 1936 an allegorical/SF novel that deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the classics noted above. His <i>War with the Newts</i> is in many senses an even more dystopic novel than the four novels listed above. Instead of rooting the problems in a rapacious and/or uncaring society or government, Čapek goes further, attempting to bare the sordid shared human past and how horribly we have treated ourselves and others in the past and present. Despite being written nearly 75 years ago, <i>War with the Newts</i> still has the power to unsettle us, since so few of the issues referenced there have ever really been resolved.<br />
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The story begins with the discovery of a rare, humanoid-shaped species of newts in the South Indian Ocean near Indonesia. The discoverers quickly discover that this hitherto unknown newt species is extremely intelligent and is capable of learning and speaking human languages. Just before discovery, the captain of the merchant ship in the area is incredulous when a native tells him of the "tapas" who inhabit this area. The dialogue is rather revealing, as it mirrors what happens later when a "tapa" is taken into captivity:<br />
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<blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">Captain J. van Toch turned crimson. "What?" he bawled. "You dirty Cuban, you think that I shall be frightened of your devils? We'll see about that," he cried, rising with all the greatness of his honest fourteen stones. "I'm not going to waste my time here with you when I have my business to look after. But remember there aren't any devils in Dutch colonies; if there are any anywhere, then they're in the French ones. There might be some there. And now fetch me the mayor of this damned kampong here." (p. 17)</blockquote>Note the casual dismissal of a native's account. Pay close attention to the dehumanizing "devils." The unknown or rumor of the unknown often brings forth charges of the object/entity being non-human, often vaguely threatening to any sense of propriety that the holder of these opinions may have. But what happens after first contact? Well, what would you think people would do with a verified sentient being that has been captured?<br />
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<blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">Some time later Sir Charles was sitting beside Professor Petrov and discussing the so-called animal intelligence, conditioned reflexes, and how popular ideas overrate the reasoning powers of animals. Professor Petrov expressed his doubts about the Elberfeld horses which, it was said, could not only count, but also raise a number to a higher power and find the square root of a number; "for not even a normal, intelligent man can extract the square root of a number, can he?" said the great scientist. Sir Charles remembered Gregg's talking salamander. "I have a salamander here," he began with hesitation, "it's that one known as Andrias Scheuchzeri, and it's learned to talk like a cockatoo." (pp. 114-115)</blockquote><br />
From demon to being treated like an animal. It is really surprising that Čapek's narrative follows closely the treatment of indigenous groups at the hands of an invading, "colonizing" power? For the first first or so of the novel, the newts are shown to be very adaptable, intelligent creatures; the humans around them are boorish, self-satisfied, rather bigoted individuals who deign to believe that the newts are suffering from this malign treatment. A whole host of social issues, ranging from slavery to the exploitation of the proletariat by the leisure classes, underlies this first part of the novel.<br />
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But Čapek is not content to make just an allegory for human mistreatment of other humans. Instead, he goes further, referencing World War I and the militarism of the German, Italian, Polish, and Russian governments of the 1930s. While the newts have managed to gain some half-hearted recognition that they are not to be enslaved, the menial drudgery that they undertake in the coastal regions is supplemented by secretive arming plans by the Great Powers that are supplying "their" newts with undersea-adapted weapons. Yet despite this arms race, the Great Powers fail to grasp the demographic pressures facing the newts as their population swells to several times that of the human populations. Here, the echoes of <i>Lebensraum </i>are found in the increasingly strident demands of the hidden, secretive "Chief Salamander." When his demands are unmet, the newts unleash destructive explosive devices that cause massive earthquakes and the creation of new coastal plains for the newts to live. The humans go to war with them, but they are threatened with destruction by an enemy that has surpassed them without any ever realizing beforehand just how dangerous they had become.<br />
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<i>War with the Newts</i> is a powerful allegorical tale of how easy it is for people to ignore the needs and desires of others, how quick people can be to subjugate another group, just because of slight differences in appearance and customs. These themes are not rooted in any one time (despite Čapek's references to "Nordic Salamanders" and other plays on Nazi racial laws), but instead are universal human concerns that have plagued societies for millennia. Čapek addresses these issues in a way that makes for a fast-paced yet instructive read that leaves the reader with much to consider. As a dystopia, <i>War with the Newts</i> is scary in just how plausible its thematic elements (e.g. of how casual dismissal of one group could lead to that group rising up to overthrow the established order) still can be in this age and time. It is a novel that survives the test of time precisely because of how "current" its concerns are even now in the early 21st century. Highly recommended. <b> </b> </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-73080718050845526912011-06-26T15:26:00.000-05:002011-06-26T15:26:39.144-05:00SF Masterworks #87: Brian Aldiss, Greybeard<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZRkT123atI2NWggoCc1LmDitbhhlvW3ykHDWbxCEnLHvi0Ba7tMQx49ajE_HJtlZm6kU1xzksPLV3IDssqGezLOeLYREGYhtyWDHd1hCMajDCyqpwT4n-99lsHTYK3LgH0fkSy3siVH8/s1600/Greybeard.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZRkT123atI2NWggoCc1LmDitbhhlvW3ykHDWbxCEnLHvi0Ba7tMQx49ajE_HJtlZm6kU1xzksPLV3IDssqGezLOeLYREGYhtyWDHd1hCMajDCyqpwT4n-99lsHTYK3LgH0fkSy3siVH8/s320/Greybeard.jpg" width="209" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">When Martha was asleep, he rose. The mutton-fat light still burned, though he had shielded its glow from the window. He stood, letting his mind become like a landscape into which strange thoughts could wander. He felt the frost gathering outside the house, and the silence, and turned away to close his mind again. The light stood on an old chest of drawers. He opened one of the drawers at random and looked in. It contained family trinkets, a broken clock, some pencil stubs, an ink bottle empty of ink. With a feeling of wrongdoing, he pocketed the two longest bits of pencil and opened the neighborhood drawer. Two photograph albums of an old-fashioned kind lay there. On top of them was the framed picture of a child.<br />
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The child was a boy of about six, a cheerful boy whose smile showed a gap in his teeth. He was holding a model railway engine and wore long tartan trousers. The print had faded somewhat. Probably it was a boyhood photograph of the man now stacked carelessly out in the sheep shed.<br />
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Sudden tears stood in Greybeard's eyes. Childhood itself lay in the rotting drawers of the world, a memory that could not stand permanently against time. Since that awful - accident, crime, disaster, in the last century, there had been no more babies born. There were no more children, no more boys like this. Nor, by now, were there any more adolescents, or young men, or young women with their proud style; not even the middle-aged were left now. Of the seven ages of man, little but the last remained. (pp. 37-38)</blockquote><br />
Death is an integral part of human life. From embryo to newborn to adolescent to adult to the old-timer sighing out a death rattle, there is a natural progression in human societies as we age. For many, the fear of the inevitable death is mitigated by the knowledge that their legacy will continue with the children they have engendered and raised to carry on family traditions. For others, there is no consolation in death, only the forced acceptance that from birth, one is in a constant state of dying. Old age in particular contains its mixture of memory and grim acceptance: nostalgia for things now past, with few certainties besides death remaining for them to experience.<br />
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But what if the greying age did not bring the hope of future generations to continue the cycle? What if this were it, that human life would become extinct when your generation passed? How would you react in such a situation? Would there be acceptance or denial? These questions were raised in several novels in the 1950s and 1960s as humans came perhaps the closest to wiping out human civilization - and the majority of all lifeforms - that we have ever seen. This period saw the release of novels such as Nevil Shute's 1957 novel, <i>On the Beach</i>, that posited the end of all human life as deadly radioactive fallout slowly moves toward the last southern outposts of humanity, as well as Walter M. Miller, Jr.'s 1959 classic, <i>A Canticle for Leibowitz</i>, that deals with the wiping out of human civilization due to nuclear war and its rebuilding. <br />
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British author Brian Aldiss's 1964 novel, <i>Greybeard</i>, takes a different tack to exploring the worry and paranoia that were present during the first two decades of the Atomic Age. Rather than showing a sudden decline, instead his novel is devoted to a human civilization, as Eliot might describe, that is going out more with a whimper than a bang. The story begins in 2029 in Oxford, roughly fifty years after the "Big Accident," in which a nuclear weapon explodes in the upper atmosphere, rendering all humans (or so it seems) sterile. There are no more children, everyone is in their 50s or older. The story's narrator, Algy Timberlane, most commonly known as Greybeard for his navel-length beard, reminisces on the changes wrought by the collapse of human society following this incident that occurred when he was little more than a toddler. He does not remember a "before," only an "after." From billions, the worldwide human population has shrunk to a bare few million. Flora and fauna rush in to fill in the gaps. Instead of the hedonistic last days portrayed in Shute's novel or the religious imagery found in Miller's work, <i>Greybeard</i>'s focus centers around a slow, gradual march of wilderness overtaking the last remnants of human society:<br />
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<div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">Man had gone, and the great interlocking world of living species had already knitted over the space he once occupied. Moving without any clear sense of direction, they had to spend another two nights on islands in the lake; but since the weather continued mild and the food plentiful, they raised very little complaint, beyond the unspoken one that beneath their rags and wrinkles they regarded themselves still as modern man, and modern man was entitled to something better than wandering through a Pleistocene wilderness.</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">The wilderness was punctuated now and again by memorials of former years, some of them looking all the grimmer and blacker for lingering on out of context. (p. 156)</div></blockquote>As Greybeard and his wife Martha move down the Thames River from the ruins of Oxford in an attempt to reach the sea, they encounter not just the empty reminders of what was lost, but oddly enough, signs that perhaps there are still fertile humans. Yet this discovery does not enliven them with hope. No, rather it makes no difference to Greybeard's generation, other than these half-feral upstarts are a disturbance to them and a threat to the quiet dissolution that so many of them seek.<br />
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This realization is what makes the novel almost lyrical. More so than its quiet, understated metaphors for decline, decay, and dissolution, <i>Greybeard</i> contains a poetic power in its grim resolution to remember what is passing and celebrating that rather than any nebulous hope that might be born with a new generation that might succeed where they have failed. This lends the novel a sense of gravitas that otherwise would be lacking.<br />
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<i>Greybeard</i> is not a novel to be read for its plot; there really is little to the story other than Greybeard's reflections on the changing scenery and how those changes were wrought. There is little overt conflict, unless one counts that inevitable conflict with that unbeaten champion of Death. Some readers might find this 239 page novel to be dull for these absences, but for those who are willing to consider the themes, especially that of aging and the reluctant acceptance of one's impending doom, <i>Greybeard</i> might prove to be one of the more quiet, yet powerful, masterpieces of post-apocalyptic literature produced during the past half-century.<br />
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</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-60597447872757164202011-06-25T22:08:00.002-05:002011-06-25T22:08:55.656-05:00SF Masterworks #84: M.J. Engh, Arslan<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><h3 class="post-title entry-title"> </h3><div class="post-body entry-content"> <div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;"><div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgsGef_agBXBuRvgpORVLWmmk9WOz6IsOVdsYyFac6DFl3-g_GNnt3M1sA8PCk0ilFDk5eJni93N39MP1yN6uG1Gq0vLpSe8ylprUwVfgmRotg3lYqLY8pqIQmEgOVPNQXoIxLkh-4cTdI/s1600/Arslan.jpg" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgsGef_agBXBuRvgpORVLWmmk9WOz6IsOVdsYyFac6DFl3-g_GNnt3M1sA8PCk0ilFDk5eJni93N39MP1yN6uG1Gq0vLpSe8ylprUwVfgmRotg3lYqLY8pqIQmEgOVPNQXoIxLkh-4cTdI/s320/Arslan.jpg" width="207" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">"It is true that Kraftsville was a safe and pleasant place, in comparison with other places. Your hungriest paupers have been better fed than the chiefs of towns. Your people have slept in security. They were free, they were healthy, as human health and freedom go. They had never suffered war. But you know that in most of the world, sir, there has been war and war again, and again, and again war, so that every generation learns again. Strange. It is very strange." He shook his head like a man in real puzzlement.<br />
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"What is?"<br />
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“More than a hundred years without war. A strange way of life.”<br />
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“What do you mean, without war? My God, we’ve-“<br />
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“You have <i>made</i> war, you have not suffered it! Your nation, sir, has been perhaps the happiest to exist in the world. And yet consider its history. The natives despoiled, displaced, cheated, brutalized, slaughtered. The most massive system of slavery since the fall of Rome… The upheaval, the upswelling, of savagery, of violence. Not revolution, sir, for revolution requires coherence. Not eighteenth-century France, but fifth-century Rome… Grotesque, sir, this combination of a primitive puritanism and a frantic decadence; very like the Romans whom you so resemble.”(pp. 80-81)</blockquote></div><br />
M.J. Engh's 1976 novel,<i> Arslan</i>, will aggravate, frustrate, and confound many readers who encounter it. It is, among other things, a story of the United States falling under the sway of a global dictatorship, a tale of resistance, a narrative on childhood, but above all else I would argue that it is a commentary on power and the relationships engendered from it. For some readers, Engh's seeming reduction of a vast array of complex issues down to the size of town/county affairs might not be as much an affirmation of former US House Speaker Tip O'Neill's adage, "All politics is local," as an annoying conceit that serves to cover up the sketchiness of Engh's plot. For others, however, her decision to focus the action of the story around the rural Illinois town of Kraftsville frees herself from the encumbrances of having to explain the external mechanics which might divert the reader away from the often uncomfortable socio-political issues that Engh wants to explore here.<br />
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The basic premise can be discussed and dismissed briefly: a young warlord, Arslan, from the fictional Central Asian country of Turkistan, has bluffed and threatened his way into gaining control of a secret Soviet anti-missile laser system (SDI a decade before the "Star Wars" program was ever announced to the American people). In short order, the major governments in Europe, the Soviet Union, China, and the United States surrender. Arslan and his soldiers, Turkistanis and Russians alike, suddenly set up camp in the small American town of Kraftsville, where Arslan regales his troops with a victorious gathering topped off by the raping of two selected youth: a female and a male, Hunt Morgan, who later becomes one of the novel's two narrators. From this graphic scene, Arslan comes and goes in Kraftsville (or District 3281) over intervals of several years for the next two decades.<br />
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Rape, especially over the past half-century since it became a war crime, is a problematic issue in any novel that contains it, but even more when the rape of a (male) child is involved. Several reviews of <i>Arslan</i> focus on the shock and discomfort found when encountering the rape of Hunt Morgan in the opening chapter of the book. Since Hunt's complex relationship with Arslan forms an integral part of the novel, perhaps it is best to explore the ways in which this rape is used. Engh certainly does not sensationalize, nor does she dismiss with a cavalier attitude, Hunt's rape. Rather, his rape becomes a concrete metaphor that works on several levels: the representation of the plight of youth of both sexes in war-torn areas (the fact that the US hasn't suffered this since the end of the Civil War is harped upon in passages like the one quoted at the beginning of this review); the degradation of power relationships along the lines of imperialist resource/people exploitation (here shown in reverse); the terrorization that is unleashed on District 3281 in the immediate aftermath of Arslan's triumphant entry into the city. This does not diminish the reactions engendered by Arslan's rape of Hunt, but it does serve to provide a context in which Hunt's later actions can be seen as much more than a sickening case of sympathy for one's own tormenter.<br />
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Arslan's character and actions might be just as disconcerting for several. From the ceremonial rapist, Arslan moves away from the diabolical, warlord character toward something more nuanced and mystifying. His initial actions are unequivocally brutal (the rape, the rounding up of girls for a harem, the harsh martial law established in District 3281), but the <i>bon homme </i>that he is portrayed as being after the first third of the novel is much more seductive than assertive. It is, as he says about Hunt (and which could be applied to others), "after the rape comes the seduction." In his conversations with Franklin Bond, the principal of Kraft County's high school (and later the conflicted head of the Kraft County Resistance), Arslan comes across as being more and more reasonable, even as some of his actions (the injection of people worldwide with a sterility-inducing virus) are perhaps even more horrific than his first deeds, mitigated only by the distance (the world outside of Kraft County is shrouded in a fog of non-news) and reader sympathy with the root cause (the need to reduce human overpopulation). By the novel's concluding chapters, Engh's seduction of the reader's sympathies has been far advanced after the sudden rape of their sensibilities.<br />
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Why does this occur? Perhaps it is because Arslan's character is never presented as being "just" evil or "just" anything; he <i>is</i>, just like President Clinton was a philanderer who was still admired for his policies by many despite his numerable character flaws. Arslan is a breath of life compared to the stolid, sometimes smug Franklin Bond. He achieves things, he overcomes certain socio-political roadblocks that just aren't broken in contemporary representative democracies. His dismissive attitude to his own power is beguiling because it promises a possible non-corruptive personality, even if subsequent events might lead one to question that presumption. He has power over the other characters precisely because he has control over himself. He may weep, he may rage, but what Arslan does best is <i>expect</i>. This is seen in how quickly he overcomes Bond and others with his force of personality; he expects them to hate him, distrust him, revile him, but also to ultimately obey him because they have run out of other alternatives. This might ring untrue to most reading it, but there is a certain appeal to this powerful cult of personality that certainly has its parallels in several charismatic leaders of the past two centuries whose callous actions still garnered them admiration from their purportedly-repressed constituents. <br />
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Throughout <i>Arslan</i>, these unbalanced power relationships are played out. From Hunt's subsequent treatment by the townspeople to how he, when he appears as a narrator, casts Arslan as a noble, complex personage, power relationships are presented in terms that underscore the inequalities of the relationships. Very rarely are people presented as being co-equal. No, what we see is a smug, pathetic "resistance" to Arslan's commander, Nizam, that amounts to nothing substantive and which presents as its only "victory" the continual honoring of those executed for an assassination. Never is Arslan's own authority ever really challenged; even the symbolic resistance grounds down into a sullen compliance. This subordination has become so final that even when the signs of dominance are removed, the effects of Arslan's reign still rule the people of Kraft County. Power might corrupt, it might beguile, but it certainly does hold sway over people, even when they think themselves free from it.<br />
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Engh's up-close look at power relationships through the character of Arslan and the dramatic changes he engenders is not free of flaws. Some might find the local/personal nature of the story to be underwhelming because so much is lost in the "fog" of events elsewhere that might seem more appealing to them. Others might find the messages contained within the narrative to be unappealing and unconvincing because they are not argued for as much as presented as being <i>fait accompli</i>. Certainly some will not experience that "seduction" which follows the "rape." But for others, <i>Arslan</i> is a moving, powerful work because it forces the reader to reconsider his or her own assumptions about how power relationships work and whether or not one might be willing to be an accomplice in the subversion of ideals once held to be steadfast and true. For those readers, <i>Arslan</i> will be a true masterwork that will resonate with them long after the initial read is complete and after re-reads are done in coming years.</div></div></div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-18957067552724707442011-06-11T14:45:00.000-05:002011-06-11T14:45:04.012-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #43: Geoff Ryman, WAS<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEix6PxfA0UnYEoI8kfTC-LfqeprXiSEQv0wgViLrGRqS1PJJ9A2oRo2y2bzwE0-p-OmWr1HTXIXP0dxK1BgzGqUJWA7_4dUQ_1_0PELw-j6nr4Yu16dDiU_wjRlaRIdmncfPR8zzqWbPko/s1600/WAS.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEix6PxfA0UnYEoI8kfTC-LfqeprXiSEQv0wgViLrGRqS1PJJ9A2oRo2y2bzwE0-p-OmWr1HTXIXP0dxK1BgzGqUJWA7_4dUQ_1_0PELw-j6nr4Yu16dDiU_wjRlaRIdmncfPR8zzqWbPko/s320/WAS.jpg" width="208" /></a></div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">Hell was full of the souls of children. They were made to sing merry school songs, chained to desks. They were drilled by tormenting demons in gray clothes with spectacles and fangs and rulers that beat wrists until hands dropped off.</span></span></div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span"><br />
</span></span></div><div style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">There was a race of dwarves in Hell. They wore black leather harnesses, just like in certain L.A. bars. They had interesting deformities that took the better part of a day to create in makeup, and they flayed people alive. They sang and danced as they worked, like a Disney movie played backward. At the climax, Hell was harrowed by a visiting priest, and Mortimer escaped in a blaze of fire, out into the real world, an eternal spirit, to kill again and again in a chain of sequels. Mort was the wounded spirit of the eternal hatred of children. (p. 284)</span></span></div><div><br />
</div><div>Geoff Ryman's <i>WAS</i> is perhaps the black sheep of the Gollancz Fantasy Masterworks list. Unlike every other book that was republished under this banner, <i>WAS</i> contains no overt or even subvert "fantastical" elements to it. Instead, it is more a story about how fantasies can shape people's lives. But even that barely gets at the heart of this rather "mundane" tale.</div><div><br />
</div><div><i>WAS</i> contains three main threads. The first is set in Manhattan, Kansas in the 1880s and revolves around Dorothy Gael, presumably the main influence for Frank Baum's original <i>Oz</i> stories. While there is a Toto and an Uncle Henry and Auntie Em, Dorothy does not lead a happy life. Orphaned at the age of five and condemned to a life of harsh mistreatment at the hands of her aunt and uncle, Dorothy becomes a painful figure to read. I had to stop reading at times because it was getting too close to my professional life (working with abused and troubled male teens), because Ryman did an excellent job of showing how such abused children often will flee into an imagined world in which they yearn for a release from the toils and trammels of everyday existence (not life, as for some, "life" has "died" when the traumas began). The climactic part of this thread is when Baum comes to meet Dorothy and he takes her misery and her almost-crushed hopes and he spins something from that to give back to her to cherish.</div><div><br />
</div><div>The second thread concerns Jonathan, a horror actor and <i>The Wizard of Oz</i> aficionado who is now dying of advanced AIDS. Jonathan himself comes from a troubled background and he finds himself wanting to know in his dying days just what can be found over the rainbow, whether or not Baum's Dorothy has a basis in real life. While his thread is not as painful to read as the Dorothy Gael one, there are certain uncomfortable moments about how Jonathan's own fantasies are both sustaining him and driving him deeper into a form of madness.</div><div><br />
</div><div>The third and unifying thread belongs to Bill, Jonathan's therapist, who also happens to have encountered someone else with a deep connection to the world of Oz. Bill's cheerful approach to life, tested many times (as seen in one important flashback), serves to bind the threads together in a way that illustrates how fantasizing can be a consoling and healing process. His thread, although by far the shortest of the three, serves to balance out the raw emotions of the other two threads and to help fashion an ending that while true to the notion that fantasies are not "real," appears to provide some form of reconciliation between Desire and Reality.</div><div><br />
</div><div>Is <i>WAS</i> worthy of being called a "Fantasy Masterwork?" Only in the most broad, vaguest sense. In many ways (the author's afterward is pretty explicit about this), the book was written to showcase the perceived conflicts between fantasizing and everyday reality and how the former can have deleterious (and occasionally meloriating) effects on the latter. Yet despite the author's attempt to wrest interpretation duties from the reader, I found the book to be engaging and thoughtful on several levels. The three threads did mesh well at the end, even if the first half was hard to follow the connections at times. The characterizations hit a little too close to home for me, but I do not regret having read such painful passages. But for me, this book does not sit well next to the genre fictions surrounding it on the Gollancz list. It is at least near a masterwork in terms of prose, chacterization, and thematic development, but the themes just seem to be at such odds with those contained in the other 49 books of the Fantasy Masterworks list that I am uncertain if many genre-mostly readers will warm to this novel as much as I did.</div></div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-78232828467079898172011-06-05T14:12:00.000-05:002011-06-05T14:12:27.094-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #8: Robert E. Howard, The Conan Chronicles Volume I: The People of the Black Circle<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglO6V8-n2cfwJq_cc99GHeT7oiOu04i5a0vPvDcZ_AuTUoG5Pg310WTHzaxmIfkTqDI5pW-koD3dNmyUrFKX-XzcyZsvTpzGeOLHxUR8eFFGnvAJTAr1IB3ZW6sIe6Pu7chjuizd6S-n4/s1600/Conan+I.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEglO6V8-n2cfwJq_cc99GHeT7oiOu04i5a0vPvDcZ_AuTUoG5Pg310WTHzaxmIfkTqDI5pW-koD3dNmyUrFKX-XzcyZsvTpzGeOLHxUR8eFFGnvAJTAr1IB3ZW6sIe6Pu7chjuizd6S-n4/s1600/Conan+I.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">Conan went up the stairs and halted at the door he knew well of old. It was fastened within, but his blade passed between the door and the jamb and lifted the bar. he stepped inside, closing the door after him, and faced the girl who had betrayed him to the police.</span></span><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span"><br />
</span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">The wench was sitting cross-legged in her shift on her unkempt bed. She turned white and stared at him as if at a ghost. She had heard the cry from the stairs, and she saw the red stain on the poniard in his hand. But she was too filled with terror on her own account to waste any time lamenting the evident fate of her lover. She began to beg for her life, almost incoherent with terror. Conan did not reply; he merely stood and glared at her with his burning eyes, testing the edge of his poniard with a calloused thumb.</span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span"><br />
</span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">At last he crossed the chamber, while she cowered back against the wall, sobbing frantic pleas for mercy. Grasping her yellow locks with no gentle hand, he dragged her off the bed. Thrusting his blade back in its sheath, he tucked his squirming captive under his left arm, and strode to the window. Like most houses of that type, a ledge encircled each story, caused by the continuance of the window-ledges. Conan kicked the window open and stepped out on that narrow band. If any had been near or awake, they would have witnessed the bizarre sight of a man moving carefully along the ledge, carrying a kicking, half-naked wench under his arm. They would have been no more puzzled than the girl.</span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span"><br />
</span></span></div><div><span style="font-size: small;"><span class="Apple-style-span">Reaching the spot he sought, Conan halted, gripping the wall with his free hand. Inside the building rose a sudden clamor, showing that the body had at last been discovered. His captive whimpered and twisted, renewing her importunities. Conan glanced down into the muck and slime of the alleys below; he listened briefly to the clamor inside and the pleas of the wench; then he dropped her with great accuracy into a cesspool. He enjoyed her kickings and flounderings and the concentrated venom of her profanity for a few seconds, and even alloed himself a low rumble of laughter. Then he lifted his head, listened to the growing tumult within the building and decided it was time for him to kill Nabonidus. (pp. 83-84)</span></span></div></blockquote><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: x-small;"></span></div><div><br />
</div><div>Robert E. Howard's Conan stories, 21 tales written between 1932 and Howard's death by suicide in 1935, stand like a Colossus in the subgenre of sword and sorcery fantasy that followed. For his supporters, Howard's imagination burned like a meteor through the night sky, brilliant, dazzling, lasting all too brief of a time. Howard's detractors, however, deplore his seeming chauvinistic, capricious attitude toward women, and they would point to scenes such as the one quoted above as an example of how degrading this form of fantasy literature could be, not just toward women, but also toward the numerous real-world ethnic groups that Howard depicts in very slightly-altered form in his Conan the Cimmerian tales.</div><div><br />
</div><div>When I began reading this first volume of two, I had quite a few reservations. Oh, I had heard much about how vivid and "alive" Howard's tales were and that if read as simple adventure pieces, much enjoyment could be gained from them. But I was uneasy about learning of his casual references to "wenches" and his use of racial stereotypes. I feared that I might be in for a reading of a series of stories that, while certainly better-written than the imitative work, would possess the depth and meaning of a <i>The Eye of Argon</i>. After finishing this first volume, my reservations still remain.</div><div><br />
</div><div>Howard certainly had a flair for telling an action-packed, vividly-rendered tale in short story or novella form. His Hyperborean Age setting of an Earth tens of thousands of years ago that would serve as a clear mirror for the "distorted myths" that would follow, certainly allowed him much leeway in creating interesting backdrops for Conan's adventures. Depending on what the reader brings to the table, passages such as the long one I cited above can be thrilling, as the villains get their comeuppance in short order and Conan survives to fight for another day.</div><div><br />
</div><div>But for those like myself who have certain beliefs in regards to ethnicity and gender relations, Conan's tales present quite a few roadblocks to enjoying Howard's writing. The frequent mentions of naked or half-naked "wenches," many of them chained to slave masters or kings, serving mostly as props for Conan's enjoyment or as a weak-willed, weak-hearted damsel in distress for him to rescue, makes for a rather dated and sometimes repellent world-view that hopefully is fading into the past. I could not, as much as I tried, distance myself from my own views when reading these tales. While I could recognize Howard's ability to tell an exciting yarn, ultimately I was left thinking that most writers (John Norman being a notable exception) who have been influenced by Howard are at least writing tales that invert or subvert Howard's often-odious notions regarding race and gender.</div><div><br />
</div><div>Was this volume worthy of being called a "Fantasy Masterwork?" Despite my reactions to elements of his writing, Howard has had too much of an influence on too many writers over the past seventy-seven years for him not to be considered one. Whether or not one might enjoy his writings today depends on the type of baggage that the reader brings to the table. For myself, I can appreciate much of what he accomplished with these tales, but that I have reservations about some of his elements to enjoy them fully. </div></div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-30403739752147326022011-06-05T14:09:00.000-05:002011-06-05T14:09:17.467-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #39: Evangeline Walton, The Mabinogion<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgo4DhtHHVr3gtkpz_ThiamqKvhKXmMOVfnHGtIsRI9WDdMLMulrt8faAWkoH9Bz0DIVoqtmG709IMsdnNnSdorWBkMArkt0DS9szh-pjG0TW3SHD4W54tc_w3XCR1Z6Le4loovmke7hlo/s1600/maginogion.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgo4DhtHHVr3gtkpz_ThiamqKvhKXmMOVfnHGtIsRI9WDdMLMulrt8faAWkoH9Bz0DIVoqtmG709IMsdnNnSdorWBkMArkt0DS9szh-pjG0TW3SHD4W54tc_w3XCR1Z6Le4loovmke7hlo/s1600/maginogion.jpg" /></a></div><br />
<blockquote style="font-style: italic;">That day Pwyll, Prince of Dyved, who thought he was going out to hunt, was in reality going out to be hunted, and by no beast or man of earth. (p. 15)</blockquote><br />
Myths are an absolute bitch to translate properly. Grounded in a particular milieu, myths rarely reveal their full power to those not raised in that particular culture's time and values. Yet a good translation can approximate the best qualities of the original, making for a powerful tale that carries the echoes of something deeper, wilder, and more mystical than what a present-day reader may behold.<br />
<br />
I have only the tiniest trace of Welsh ancestry (being in most part Irish and Cherokee ancestry, I grew up with other legends), so while I had heard of the Welsh myth/story cycle called the Mabinogion, I was not familiar with its particulars. So in some senses, I am the ideal reader for American writer Evangeline Walton's adaptation of that story cycle, also entitled <span style="font-style: italic;">The Mabinogion</span>. Originally published as four books (<span style="font-style: italic;">Prince of Annwn, The Children of Llyr, The Song of Rhiannon, </span>and <span style="font-style: italic;">The Island of the Mighty</span>) in the 1930s, Walton's books aimed to "modernize" the Welsh stories without (according to Walton, in a couple of her endnotes) adding or subtracting from the originals. However, these stories were not successful until they were republished in the 1970s, likely in response to J.R.R. Tolkien's popularization of fantasy stories.<br />
<br />
Each of the four books is in turn broken down into parts that revolve around particular story events. In the first volume, <span style="font-style: italic;">Prince of Annwn</span>, the young Prince Pwyll dominates the first thread, while in succeeding "branches", the reader encounters the wizard-prince Gwydion, the beautiful Rhiannon, and the doughty Branwen. In each of these stories, there are echoes of certain cultural clashes, such as the invasions by the Romans and (later) the Anglo-Saxons, or of the infiltration of Christian values into what originally were pagan myths. Walton does not attempt to whitewash these, but instead she went to great pains to keep these competing cultural values embedded within the stories. From what I can judge, being almost wholly ignorant of Welsh mythology, Walton attempted to do for that story cycle what John Steinbeck at the end of his life aimed to do for Thomas Mallory's <span style="font-style: italic;">Le Morte D'Arthur</span>: make the story "readable" for a "modern" audience while as retaining as much of essence of the original as possible.<br />
<br />
Did Walton succeed? For me, I found myself paying very close attention to the stories. There were echoes of other cultures' mythologies in Pwyll's day-long duel with Havgan, whose strength waxes and wanes with the sun's rise and setting. Walton told stories such as this in clear, evocative language that was in turns direct and poetic, but never dull or obtuse. In reading this omnibus, I saw names and locales which I believe were later used by other fantasy writers, making me wonder if they had been influenced by Walton or if they too were tapping into the same mythological streams. Some might say these tales are very "Celtic," and I suppose that would be an aptly vague, almost meaningless title, except Walton's tales do not feel as though they are copies of greater works. Instead, she manages to infuse these stories with a vitality that makes for a very enjoyable read.<br />
<br />
Is Walton's <span style="font-style: italic;">The Mabinogion</span> worthy of being called a "Fantasy Masterwork?" In my opinion, yes. She relates powerful, timeless tales in clear language that might make many readers want to delve further into the original Welsh myths. The best translations inspire a curiosity as to how the original would be for the reader, and in this, Walton has succeeded with me. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-70704989478741971172011-06-05T13:51:00.000-05:002011-06-05T13:51:43.485-05:00SF Masterworks #71: Frank Herbert, Dune<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhchVN8ZPgOpQzd43Wjr5I3n7TH4cuamqTKVdb8kH6pv_GXX70bnjpUyVcw_prU3sHmDoPd1dPkxQvGd3s4cWBSrmb5yyVRNHHO9Q3PAjCmWwNnzzQPez-czV036xUte6ZXfALXvpI9kSU/s1600/Dune.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhchVN8ZPgOpQzd43Wjr5I3n7TH4cuamqTKVdb8kH6pv_GXX70bnjpUyVcw_prU3sHmDoPd1dPkxQvGd3s4cWBSrmb5yyVRNHHO9Q3PAjCmWwNnzzQPez-czV036xUte6ZXfALXvpI9kSU/s1600/Dune.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote><i>"I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain." (p. 8)</i></blockquote><br />
The Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear is perhaps one of the most famous passages from a 20th century SF novel. It certainly is a powerful truism and it is one of the things that people first associate with Frank Herbert's <i>Dune</i>. Published in 1965, <i>Dune</i> was the first winner of the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1966, in addition to winning the Hugo Award that year as well. <i>Dune</i> is one of the earlier "ecological" SF novels, predating the first Earth Day by five years. As such, there is a powerful unspoken character, the planet Arrakis, who comes to dominate the narrative much more than any of the human protagonists. Harsh, seemingly unyielding and full of dangers, Arrakis appears at first glance to be untameable, but ultimately it is the taming of this planet that drives much of the novel. From the awesome Shai-Halud (or the huge sandworms) to the water-preserving stillsuits that the Fremen wear to the cataloging of the effects that the spice melange has on its users, Herbert develops a vividly-rendered desert environment that contains an aura of mystery and danger. Arrakis indeed is by far the most realized and dynamic of the characters that appear in this novel.<br />
<br />
The human conflicts, whether it be between the Houses of Atreides and Harkonnen, between the Emperor and the Landsraad or between the Fremen and the Harkonnen, are nowhere near as well-developed. Despite the interesting choice of naming the name of Paul Muad'Dib after the mythological Greek house of Agamemnon, very little is made of this purported connection with Greek tragedy. Perhaps Paul's father Leto I, fated it seems to die and with everyone expecting it, may seem at first to fit the tragic role, this is undercut by Herbert's sloppy narrative.<br />
<br />
The characters in <i>Dune</i> rarely seem to be "human" in their thoughts, actions, or mistakes. In large part, this is due to Herbert's unfortunate tendency to overuse internal monologues, with several scenes containing multiple characters, each of whom will be shown to say something, only to be followed with their internal monologue indicating whether or not "truth" was spoken. Below is a scene where Duke Leto, his Bene Gesserit concubine Jessica, the water-shipper Bewt and the Imperial Planetologist Kynes interact:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>"My Lord, the Duke, and I have other plans for our conservatory," Jessica said. She smiled at Leto. "We intend to keep it, certainly, but only to hold it in trust for the people of Arrakis. It is our dream that someday the climate of Arrakis may be changed sufficiently to grow such plants anywhere in the open."<br />
<br />
<i>Bless her!</i> Leto thought. <i>Let our water-shipper chew on that.</i><br />
<br />
"Your interest in water and weather control is obvious," the Duke said. "I'd advise you to diversify your holdings. One day, water will not be a precious commodity on Arrakis."<br />
<i> </i><br />
<i> </i>And he thought: <i>Hawat must redouble his efforts at infiltrating this Bewt's organization. And we must start on stand-by water facilities at once. No man is going to hold a club over my head!</i><br />
<br />
Bewt nodded, the smile still on his face. "A commendable dream, my Lord." He withdrew a pace.<br />
<br />
Leto's attention was caught by the expression on Kynes' face. The man was staring at Jessica. He appeared transfigured - like a man in love...or caught in a religious trance.<br />
<br />
Kynes' thoughts were overwhelmed at last by the words of prophecy: <i>"And they shall share your most precious dream."</i> He spoke directly to Jessica: "Do you bring the shortening of the way?"<br />
<br />
"Ah, Dr. Kynes," the water-shipper said. "You've come in from tramping around with your mobs of Fremen. How gracious of you."<br />
<br />
Kynes passed an unreadable glance acros Bewt, said: "It is said in the desert that possession of water in great amount can inflict a man with fatal carelessness."<br />
<br />
"They have many strange sayings in the desert," Bewt said, but his voice betrayed uneasiness.<br />
<br />
Jessica crossed to Leto, slipped her hand under his arm to gain a moment in which to calm herself. Kynes had said: "...the shortening of the way." In the old tongue, the phrase translated as Kwisatz haderach." The planetologist's odd question seemed to have gone unnoticed by the others, and now Kynes was bending over one of the consort women, listening to a low-voiced coquetry.<br />
<br />
<i>Kwisatz Haderach</i>, Jessica thought.<i> Did our Missionaria Protectiva plant that legend here, too?</i> The thought fanned her secret hope for Paul. <i>He could be the Kwisatz Haderach. He could be.</i> (pp. 130-131)</blockquote>Obviously, this scene is meant to convey much - Kynes coming to realize the goal of the Atreides, the pointing out of the other source of wealth on Arrakis, Jessica's hopes for her son Paul, and Leto's resistance to manipulation. However, there just is not much "life" to this passage, nor is there in the majority of similar passages in the novel. The characters are there, thought overwhelms action overmuch, and the end result is that there is a sense of staticity about the characters; they rarely <i>show</i> plausible character development. They are little more than the background to the war for the environment.<br />
<br />
There are other concerns that cropped up when reading this novel. It is interesting how 45 years ago, women, even those of societies in the imaginary 200 centuries after our time, are little more than domestic help or are seen as vague, threatening nunneries that seek to manipulate men. Jessica and Chani are defined much more by whom they love (Leto, Paul) than by what they themselves accomplish. While certainly not a topic that would have dominated SF talk as much back in the mid-1960s, Herbert's treatment of women certainly would raise eyebrows in the early 21st century. His treatment of homosexuality is even more troublesome for the modern reader. The only homosexual character that appears in this novel is the main villain, Baron Harkonnen and in one chilling passage, he requests that his Mentat, Pietr, send him a male youth that has been drugged, since he hates for him to be thrashing about. Herbert's implied connection between homosexuality and pedophilia certainly is troublesome at best, especially considering that modern studies have shown no correlation between sexual orientation and pedophilia. Needless to say, popular attitudes about this sensitive topic have changed much in the intervening 45 years, which made that passage all the more odd to me.<br />
<br />
However, these concerns only dampen the effect of the novel. Herbert's Arrakis is one of the more powerful settings that I have read in any fictional work and perhaps is one of the more fully-realized secondary-world creations. Not just the complex interactions between desert and its organisms, but also how well Herbert mixes in religious faith and tradition with these interactions of humans and environment. Although there were a few times where the symbiotic relationships seemed a bit too strained and unrealistic, on the whole, the novel as a whole works because of the sense that the "real" story was unfolding around the action involving the human groups. <br />
<br />
On the whole, <i>Dune</i> is a very flawed novel that, despite its many flaws, is a very powerful read, especially for those readers intrigued by the idea of a fiction considering how environments can shape people and their beliefs. Certainly, it has been a very influential novel. In many ways, its status as being one of the most influential American SF novels is justified; attention to how the human and environmental elements interact is done to a much larger scale here and perhaps served as a precursor to sweeping SF trilogies such as the Mars novels that Kim Stanley Robinson wrote in the 1990s. This re-read served not only to strengthen my appreciation for the series, but also to make me more aware of how a novel can contain troubling flaws and yet still be a worthwhile read. Highly recommended for most, with caveats noted in several paragraphs above. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-22068521824968235632011-06-05T13:44:00.002-05:002011-06-05T13:44:52.880-05:00SF Masterworks #38: H.G. Wells, The First Men in the Moon<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKxvts8w5YHCu_PtsIv5-GgpKZvIDVjIYrD4RdmiIPXVqAge8wm9QEbKXU16tUeHq_Zw4Al0QCB3-pUjzvkshlP2B-OSrefO_qX2vypnA3O0GFoaBHBX76XqQZF8XVhali3So_ijaACr0/s1600/The+First+Men+in+the+Moon.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKxvts8w5YHCu_PtsIv5-GgpKZvIDVjIYrD4RdmiIPXVqAge8wm9QEbKXU16tUeHq_Zw4Al0QCB3-pUjzvkshlP2B-OSrefO_qX2vypnA3O0GFoaBHBX76XqQZF8XVhali3So_ijaACr0/s1600/The+First+Men+in+the+Moon.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">As I sit down to write here amidst the shadows of vine-leaves under the blue sky of Southern Italy it comes to me with a certain quality of astonishment that my participation in these amazing adventures of Mr. Cavor was, after all, the outcome of the purest accident. It might have been anyone. I fell into these things at a time when I thought myself removed from the slightest possibility of disturbing experiences. I had gone to Lympne because I had imagined it the most uneventful place in the world. "Here at any rare," said I, "I shall find peace and a chance to work!"<br />
<br />
And this book is the sequel. So utterly at variance is Destiny with all the little plans of men.<br />
<br />
I may perhaps mention here that very recently I had come an ugly cropper in certain business enterprises. At the present moment, surrounded by all the circumstances of wealth, there is a luxury in admitting my extremity. I can even admit that to a certain extent my disasters were conceivably of my own making. It may be there are directions in which I have some capacity; the conduct of business operations is not among these. But in those days I was young, and my youth, among other objectionable forms, took that of a pride in my capacity for affairs. I am young still in years, but the things that have happened to me have rubbed something of the youth from my mind. Whether they have brought any wisdom to light below it, is a more doubtful matter. (p. 1)</blockquote><br />
Ask most readers to identify works that H.G. Wells, and almost all will respond with <i>The Time Machine</i> or <i>The War of the Worlds</i>. Quite a few might also respond with <i>The Island of Dr. Moreau</i> or perhaps even <i>The Food of the Gods</i>, but chances are slim that among the first books named would be his 1901 novel <i>The First Men in the Moon</i>. There are likely several reasons for this. First, it may be that this novel doesn't quite have the gravitas of his more well-renowned works, although this belief is belied by several passages in this short novel. Second, there might not quite be the memorable scenes on par with those in his more famous works, although some might argue that the scenes with the heroes among the Selenites are certainly vivid. If anything may account for <i>The First Men in the Moon</i>'s relative anonymity, it may be simply that it was conceived as a satire and while Wells added elements of an adventure story to it, the tale's heart is a satire of 19th century SF and of certain dominant social attitudes at the time.<br />
<br />
<i>The First Men in the Moon</i> reads like a pastiche of two of Jules Vernes' most famous works, <i>From the Earth to the Moon</i> and <i>Journey to the Center of the Earth</i>. From the rather elevated language employed to introduce the work and to create a sense that this is a retrospective account rather than anything that would contain anything "threatening" to the characters to the mixture of the plausible and the ridiculous to explain how the protagonists manage to reach such fantastical places, there is certainly an echo of Verne's fiction in this book. If anything, Wells takes such qualities and ramps up the pseudo-scientific elements to nearly ridiculous levels. For much of the novel, the story borders on slipping from a satire of these late 19th century adventure/SF novels into the realm of a parody, or rather a weak attempt at a parody. Bedford (the narrator) and Cavor (the scientist-leader) really do not come into their own until they come in contact with the underground Selenite population.<br />
<br />
The Selenites, whose insectoid bodies and alien cultures are so baffling to the intrepid explorers, signal the shift of the story toward something a bit more serious, as he begins to focus much more on people, their dreams and aspirations, as well as how easily their fears and superstitions can poison attempts to understand foreign ideas and cultures. Written during the worst part of the Boer War in South Africa, much of the conflict that dominates the latter half of the novel references conflicts such as that while spoofing and undermining the concepts found in the first Edisonaides and other such thinly-disguised attempts to glorify the imperialist ambitions of that era. Toward the end of the novel, all of this is summarized in a dialogue between Bedford and Phi-oo, the leader of the Selenites:<br />
<blockquote><br />
<div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">'You mean to say,' he asked, seeking confirmation, 'that you run about over the surface of your world - this world, whose riches you have scarcely begun to scrape - killing one another for beasts to eat?'</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"I told him that was perfectly correct.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"He asked for particulars to assist his imagination. 'But do not your ships and your poor little cities get injured?' he asked and I found the waste of property and conveniences seemed to impress upon him almost as much as the killing. 'Tell me more,' said the Grand Lunar; 'make me see pictures. I cannot conceive these things.'</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"And so, for a space, though something loth, I told him the story of earthly War.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"I told him of the first orders and ceremonies of war, of warnings and ultimatums, and the marshalling and marching of troops. I gave him an idea of manœuvres and positions and battle joined. I told him of sieges and assaults, of starvation and hardship in trenches, and of sentinels freezing in the snow. I told him of routs and surprises, and desperate last stands and faint hopes, and the pitiless pursuit of fugitives and the dead upon the field. I told, too, of the past, of invasions and massacres, of the Huns and Tartars, and the wars of Mahomet and the Caliphs and the Crusades. And as I went on, and Phi-oo translated, the Selenites cooed and murmured in a steadily intensified emotion.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"I told them an ironclad could fire a shot of a ton twelve miles, and go through twenty feet of iron =- and how we could steer torpedoes under water. I went on to describe a Maxim gun in action and what I could imagine of the Battle of Colenso. The Grand Lunar was so incredulous that he interrupted the translation of what I had said in order to have my verification of my account. They particularly doubted my description of the men cheering and rejoicing as they went into battle.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"'But surely they do not like it!' translated Phi-oo.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"I assured them men of my race considered battle the most glorious experience of life, at which the whole assembly was stricken with amazement.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"'But what good is this war?' asked the Grand Lunar, sticking to his theme.</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"'Oh! as for <i>good!</i>', said I, 'it thins the population!'</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"'But why should there be a need -?'</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"There came a pause, the cooling sprays impinged upon his brow, and then he spoken again." (p. 158)</div></blockquote><br />
It is Wells' treatment of these scenes, not just in this particular moment but elsewhere as well, that elevates this novel from being just a parody and into a satire that not only has pointed things to say about early 20th century goals and aspirations, but something for us a century later, as sometimes we dream more of acquiring and seizing, by violence if necessary, than we do about learning how to live in brotherhood. Although this sort of message is not an easy one to read (some may lament that it is "too preachy" or "too hippy-drippy"), it is one that Wells executes fairly well in this novel. But social satires, particularly of beloved classics, as Verne's novels had already become by 1901, are not as well-liked as straight-up adventure tales and it is perhaps for this reason alone that <i>The First Men in the Moon</i> is not as well-known as many of Wells' other novels. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-74415990138774412852011-06-04T22:09:00.000-05:002011-06-04T22:09:49.423-05:00SF Masterworks #16: Ursula Le Guin, The Dispossessed<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj8KhS_tlY341gim3iX2IRD0Snr6NBUl64T4J_LNn2dDjLnw3RLmfQHjLFgwQB00KFzxbdC16b3ECCgSB8KsyQqsGGWGvMyEUNveYTwkvZ_5iDybjCbpvn8bF4FQPFqMRp2TlBBXqV2sqY/s1600/The+Dispossessed.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj8KhS_tlY341gim3iX2IRD0Snr6NBUl64T4J_LNn2dDjLnw3RLmfQHjLFgwQB00KFzxbdC16b3ECCgSB8KsyQqsGGWGvMyEUNveYTwkvZ_5iDybjCbpvn8bF4FQPFqMRp2TlBBXqV2sqY/s1600/The+Dispossessed.jpg" /></a></div>The New Wave of SF broke like a tidal wave over the shores of American and British SF. Where the "Golden Age" stories tended to focus on individuals striving against the forces of nature or on how scientific advancement would improve the lot of humanity (or see a Communist allegory threaten to swamp certain cherished institutions), the New Wave writers utilized other tools. More oriented toward the "social sciences" than the "hard sciences" favored by several Golden Age writers, New Wave authors such as J.G. Ballard, M. John Harrison, Samuel Delany, and Ursula Le Guin explored the human condition more than they ever focused on issues of development and advancement (today, such terms seem almost quaint to us who have grown up in the past forty years). Whereas the British New Wave tended to reflect upon the decline of Empire, American New Wave is characterized more by the utilization of anthropological methods in order to probe and vivisect American culture.<br />
<br />
Le Guin herself is heavily influenced by cultural anthropological methodology (her father founded the University of California's Anthropology department, only the second in the United States at the time) and this shows up repeatedly in her fiction. Le Guin's characters are most often non-white characters who in some key way stand outside of the society being represented in her fiction. Her earlier novels set in the Hainish Cycle maintain throughout a sense of observation and social commentary on a whole host of issues, ranging from environmental degradation (Le Guin being one of the first SF writers to focus on the consequences of global pollution), societal violence, xenophobia, to the malleability of gender roles. The characters themselves are keen observers who play small but vital roles in the development of the themes and plots.<br />
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This is not the case in her 1974 masterpiece, <i>The Dispossessed</i>. Shevek, the physicist who leaves the purportedly anarchist moon settlement of Anarres for the fractious mother world of Urras, plays a much more central role in the story. He is the embodiment of the anarchism of his home world, yet he is as much of an outsider to them as he is to the people he encounters on Urras. Le Guin alternates chapters, dealing with Shevek both before and after his departure for Urras and how he influences those around him.<br />
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No discussion of <i>The Dispossessed</i> would be complete without a keen look at the central theme, that of a single person's embracing of a political philosophy that at its heart confounds and frightens those who favor more regimented societies. Le Guin is careful to portray Anarrean society as being pacifist; much of this is due to the deliberate changes made to their very language, verbal and non-verbal alike. Based in large part on the Sapir-Whorf theory on language acquisition and symbolic encoding, the Anarreans lack even the rudiments of possessive language. All is shared, whether it be one's bed (male or female, it only matters if both prefer to couple), one's work details, or even one's computer-generated name. It is a seemingly utopic society, yet Le Guin, through the eyes of Shevik, reveals the ambiguities present in swapping out traditional governmental forms for a radically new way of organization.<br />
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Time and time again we see the little conflicts that arise. Jealousies emerge and nascent power structures begin to emerge a century and a half after the Anarreans have left Urras to found their utopic anarchistic society. Le Guin does not skimp on analyzing these shortcoming; rather, she uses them as a contrast to what Shevik experiences in his travels on Urras. There, we encounter the insidious effects of plutocratic society, of a Cold War analogue, and of the way patriarchal societies influence societal expectations of women. Shevik is that stranger in a strange land, yet for us, what he witnesses we understand all to well. Even thirty-seven years after its initial publication, we still witness daily the power inequalities that so many of us suffer at the hands of others and ourselves.<br />
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Yet is anarchism the golden key that will lock all those troubles away? Based on what we see unfold in <i>The Dispossessed</i>, one might say that its subtitle, "An Ambiguous Utopia," serves as a stark reminder of the insidiousness of these human plagues. Can a person be free or become free of these social evils? Perhaps, but how in turn are these rare humans treated by their fellow citizens? That question haunts the pages of this novel.<br />
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Related to this is the meanings of "dispossessed." Depending upon the context upon which one draws her conclusions, the dispossessed could be the Anarreans who remove themselves from Urras and wipe out possession itself. Or it could refer to Shevik and his encounters during his life and travels. Perhaps it references the downtrodden people on Urras who are moved by Shevik's very presence among them. Or maybe it is all of these and more. That is the beauty of Le Guin's story. In roughly 400 pages, she weaves so many elements together that we cannot make a firm conclusion of "this is how it was and what it means." Rather, we interpret and reinterpret the events upon each rereading, finding possible answers and disturbing truths each time we dare to plumb the depths of this novel. It is this that makes <i>The Dispossessed</i> an enduring "masterwork" that is one of the finest novels of the second half of the twentieth century.</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-74018550332279728522011-05-30T11:53:00.000-05:002011-05-30T11:53:33.903-05:00SF Masterworks #28: Theodore Sturgeon, More Than Human<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6KuPui09CgKYIC_dczSLl0T5UXNm9klo5MJdyqXO7pmvkWERH36CviFkALVCOYZEsZzpur0apLmENQsxhQ3gl8Bt8jsItg9FCPFqhN5r6ijpCwFzwaM9JKev0a_zU7qMnn_-uROthDeU/s1600/More+Than+Human.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6KuPui09CgKYIC_dczSLl0T5UXNm9klo5MJdyqXO7pmvkWERH36CviFkALVCOYZEsZzpur0apLmENQsxhQ3gl8Bt8jsItg9FCPFqhN5r6ijpCwFzwaM9JKev0a_zU7qMnn_-uROthDeU/s320/More+Than+Human.jpg" width="206" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">What am I doing? What am I doing? he thought wildly. Trying and trying like this to find out what I am and what I belong to...Is this another aspect of being outcast, monstrous, <i>different</i>?<br />
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"Ask Baby what kind of people are all the time trying to find out what they are and what they belong to."<br />
<br />
"He says, <i>every</i> kind."<br />
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"What kind," Lone whispered, "am I, then?"<br />
<br />
A full minute later he yelled, "<i>What kind?</i>"<br />
<br />
"Shut up a while. He doesn't have a way to say it...uh...Here. He says he is a figure-outer brain and I am a body and the twins are arms and legs and you are the head. He says the 'I' is all of us."<br />
<br />
"I belong. I belong. Part of you, part of you and you too."<br />
<br />
"The head, silly."<br />
<br />
Lone thought his heart was going to burst. He looked at them all, every one: arms to flex and reach, a body to care and repair, a brainless but faultless computer and - the head to direct it.<br />
<br />
"And we'll grow, Baby. We just got born!"<br />
<br />
"He says not on your life. He says not with a head like that. We can do practically <i>anything</i> but we most likely won't. He says we're a thing, all right, but the thing is an idiot." (pp. 75-76)</blockquote><br />
Today, American writer Theodore Sturgeon is known more for his aphoristic "Sturgeon's Law" (90% of everything written is crud, reiterated in various fashions) than he is for his own fiction, but his 1953 fix-up novel, <i>More Than Human</i> was an influential short novel from the Golden Age of SF that incorporated then-<i>en vogue</i> psychiatric elements with a look at a possible world where a diverse group of socially outcast humans with telepathic/telekinetic abilities might find themselves as being part of a greater group-whole, or <i>gestalt</i>. It is a story that intrigues and yet feels incomplete as well.<br />
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The origins of this story lie in the novella "Baby is Three" that appeared in <i>Galaxy</i> magazine. Here comprising the middle third of the expanded story, it is the core of the story of a band of misfits who don't fit in with normal human society because their own abilities, when taken separately, leave them disconnected from others, often to the point of being viewed as dull or mentally retarded. The first part introduces four of the six core characters that appear here: Lone, or the Idiot, a telepath; Janie, an eight year-old with the power of telekinesis; the nearly-mute twins Bonnie and Beanie, who possess the power of teleportation, and the "Mongoloid" Baby, with computer-like processing power. Separate, each of these four are nigh useless, but as the first part, "The Fabulous Idiot," progresses, the four come to know each other and to realize that each is both complementary and supplementary to the others, creating a new self-consciousness that is greater than the sum of the four.<br />
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"Baby is Three" explores the <i>human gestalt</i>'s expanding awareness, even as it introduces a new character, Gerry, who possesses his own telepathic powers as well as a sense of ruthlessness that was not previously present. This section is devoted heavily to psychological themes, such as belonging and the division of the conscious and subconscious. However, there is some plot and a little character development in this middle section.<br />
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The final third, "Morality," is concerned with the <i>gestalt</i>'s development of a conscience. This is seen through the integration of the sixth member, Hip, into the group after initial conflict with Gerry. This section typifies many of the strengths as well as weaknesses of Sturgeon's work. The idea of a group consciousness developing a conscience intrigues, but ultimately, the failing of the three sections in regards to developing complex characterizations (or perhaps super-characterization in the case of the <i>gestalt</i>?) dampens the potential power of this story. The characters rarely are more than sketchy ciphers who serve to fulfill the plot necessities; they do not feel "human," much less "more than human" due to this neglect to develop compelling personalities who are more than just plot vehicles.<br />
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In addition, while Sturgeon's prose is never obtuse or opaque, its limpidity is more that of a broad-stroked painting than a carefully crafted work. The conflicts contained within the three sections rarely excite the desired interest because everything is explicated or brushed over in such a fashion as to leave little room for contemplation of the subtleties of the work. There are some nuances to the story, but Sturgeon largely fails to develop them adequately, instead leaving a work that promises much that is eventually left unfulfilled. <br />
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</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-51110188893365343422011-05-29T08:37:00.000-05:002011-05-29T08:37:40.711-05:00SF Masterworks #25: Daniel Keyes, Flowers for Algernon<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaYEb8bg4f-bTwF6V8J_BLniYauwgU8AZAB7dm5HH2fGWaF4RrcIqSQ7Oeqv4VuknW0ssDEYE8xpU8sKgmI_xBgK3CCF93jdJ8izzkZ9AAWhcIyceN-TibOweX1CCgzl09Jt-0aloC80o/s1600/Flowers+for+Algernon.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaYEb8bg4f-bTwF6V8J_BLniYauwgU8AZAB7dm5HH2fGWaF4RrcIqSQ7Oeqv4VuknW0ssDEYE8xpU8sKgmI_xBgK3CCF93jdJ8izzkZ9AAWhcIyceN-TibOweX1CCgzl09Jt-0aloC80o/s320/Flowers+for+Algernon.jpg" width="211" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;"><b>progris riport 1 martch 3</b><br />
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Dr Strauss says I should rite down what I think and remembir and evrey thing that happins to me from now on. I dont no why but he says its importint so they will see if they can use me. I hope they use me becaus Miss Kinnian says mabye they can make me smart. I want to be smart. My name is Charlie Gordon I werk in Donners bakery where Mr Donner gives me 11 dollers a week and bred or cake if I want. I am 32 yeres old and next munth is my brithday. I tolld dr Strauss and perfesser Nemur I cant rite good but he says it dont matter he says I shud rite just like I talk and like I rite compushishens in Miss Kinnians class at the beekmin collidge center for retarted adults where I go to lern 3 times a week on my time off. Dr. Strauss says to rite a lot evrything I think and evrything that happins to me but I cant think anymor because I have nothing to rite so I will close for today...yrs truly Charlie Gordon. (p. 1)</blockquote><br />
Daniel Keyes' <i>Flowers for Algernon</i> may be the most widely-read Hugo/Nebula-winning story that its readers never stopped to think of as science fiction. Ever since its release in novel form in 1966 (it previously appeared in a novella incarnation in 1960), it has been a staple of required English reading lists. When I first read it at the beginning of my Honors English III class in the fall of 1990, there was nothing said about this being a SF story, yet over twenty years later, it is perhaps one of my all-time SF favorites, despite not thinking of it in those terms until a few years ago.<br />
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Centered around the progress report/diaries that the mildly retarded (IQ 68) Charlie Gordon writes over a memorable eight month period, <i>Flowers for Algernon</i> immediately captures the reader's attention through the direct way in which Charlie speaks to the reader. Learning immediately that he is an eager-to-please adult, we take pity on Charlie, as he struggles with the immediate aftermath of a radical new surgery designed to boost his intelligence to over twice that of "normal" adults. We see the many cruel jokes played on him by his co-workers at Mr. Donner's bakery and the realization Charlie has to what "pulling a Charlie Gordon" means to those who measure their own self-worth against that of a mentally unabled adult. However, Keyes' story is much more complex than just detailing the differentness with which we treat those among us who are mentally lower-functioning.<br />
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When I chose to revisit <i>Flowers for Algernon</i> for the first time in over a decade, I had in memory Charlie's radical transformation from a child-like, trusting simple soul to a cynical, arrogant, somewhat aloof genius who still lived in fear of the inner Charlie within. While this impression is of course a true one, it is also very incomplete. What Keyes explores here through Charlie is how we relate to others unlike ourselves. Written before the special education reforms of the 1970s, when the functionally delayed children and adults were locked away into institutions rather than being integrated wholesale into society, <i>Flowers for Algernon</i> gives a scathing rebuke of the callous treatment which "normal" society gave to the so-called retarded. These critiques usually do not appear directly in didactic expounding, but rather in the little comments in Charlie's journals as he notes his changing opinion of the people around him.<br />
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Parallel to Charlie is the lab mouse Algernon, who received the same intelligence-boosting neuro-surgical procedure some time prior to Charlie's own operation. At key points in the novel, Charlie's development is recast in terms of Algernon's own changes from an ordinary lab rat who runs the courses for rewards before it begins to show signs of rejecting its masters' wishes. This parallelism also serves as a foreshadowing for the latter events of the novel, as Charlie comes to realize the course of the experiment and its fatal flaw.<br />
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There is also a romantic angle to <i>Flowers for Algernon</i>, one that underscores the difference between Charlie's cognitive and emotional development. It was these scenes that makes the final scenes so tragic, as Charlie struggles to integrate his new-found intelligence with his burgeoning attraction to his former teacher. Keyes' choice of describing this conflict in terms of a near-disassociative state allows the reader a closer look into the fragile state of Charlie's personality during this time of rapid change. Because we see so much of Charlie, scenes such as this serve as a chilling reminder of what is in store for him after he discovers what the ultimate consequence of the experiment will be for him.<br />
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<i>Flowers for Algernon</i> is one of those rare novels that reveal much more to a reader on a repeat read, especially if a period of years elapse. It works as a diary of a conflicted character, a social commentary on the treatment of the mentally disabled, and as a tragic romance. Charlie's character is engaging due to his vivid descriptions of life and himself. Keyes' ability to show Charlie's changes through how he writes his journals makes this novel a captivating experience when it so easily could have been trite or overblown if Charlie's personality was not so visible in those journals. <i>Flowers for Algernon</i> is a true mid-20th century American classic and it will continue to resonate with those who wonder about those near <i>tabulae rasae </i>who we pass every day in the streets or at school and rarely stop to think about who they are in our rush to dismiss what they are.<br />
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</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-77718236254011118652011-05-28T22:29:00.000-05:002011-05-28T22:29:39.566-05:00SF Masterworks #89: Dan Simmons, Hyperion<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhK_OXe9U2oDYFYJxTPOYOf_55zevN6rf2oZbapUHs0wvFhN_EFQ2ovcCqr-0CRBSUsdjdwSJ2JI2vFDVsLZTj1WUzc9FuzKzIpFt9RSddVYEplGePhX0_QDKZ4H0eaJZ0GFF4jkhM-LRc/s1600/Hyperion.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhK_OXe9U2oDYFYJxTPOYOf_55zevN6rf2oZbapUHs0wvFhN_EFQ2ovcCqr-0CRBSUsdjdwSJ2JI2vFDVsLZTj1WUzc9FuzKzIpFt9RSddVYEplGePhX0_QDKZ4H0eaJZ0GFF4jkhM-LRc/s320/Hyperion.jpg" width="209" /></a></div><br />
When pressed to give a basic description of <i>Hyperion</i>, most readers likely would say that in structure it approximates that of Geoffrey Chaucer's <i>The Canterbury Tales</i>. There is something to that, although perhaps a more apt comparison might be to Giovanni Boccaccio's <i>The Decameron</i>, with its sense of lurking doom looming over the storytellers. What is certain, however, is that each of the pilgrims to the Time Tombs and to the Shrike have different motives and each of their stories is told in distinct fashions that engage the reader almost immediately.<br />
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The first story told by the pilgrims is that of a Roman Catholic priest. His story involves his predecessor's journey deep within Hyperion's tesla tree field to a stunted, retarded people called the Bukura. The priest intertwines his own experiences years later with the field journals found on the person of the first priest. This epistolary approach allows for a necessary distance to be created between the storyteller and the horrific tale he tells of his predecessor's suffering and inability to die completely. The story of the parasitic cruciform at first seems out of place with the other pilgrims' tales, but it does play a vital role in future volumes, if I recall.<br />
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The soldier Kassad's tale of his life as a Palestinian refugee on Mars, his joining the Hegemony's military force, and his mysterious meetings with a woman named Moneda (money? coin?) and the fleeting appearance of the Shrike provides the love interest story of this novel. Although it is unclear so far as to what Kassad's true aspirations are, elements introduced in this tale influence the later narrative in the series.<br />
<br />
The poet Martin Silenus's story is in turns poetic and bawdy, and is always full of literary allusions, some of which are to living writers, such as the horror writer Steve (Rasnic) Tem, which delighted me when I re-read this portion of the novel. If the first two stories provide the horror and the love elements, the poet's tale supplies the love of literature and of tragedy that runs its threads through the remaining narratives.<br />
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The fourth story, that of the scholar Sol Weintraub, is the most heart-wrenching of the six. It is not as much a story about himself, but about his daughter Rachel's accident at the Time Tombs nearly 30 years before and her reverse aging, day by day, back to being an infant only weeks away from her birth/death. Although this too contains elements of a horror tale, it also is a story of two devout parents and the traumas they have suffered (and which ultimately led to the suicide of the mother Sarai). Out of all the tales this is the one that connects deepest and which seems to make this ultimate pilgrimage to the Time Tombs and to the Shrike to be worth all of the travails that await the pilgrims.<br />
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The fifth tale, told by the private eye Brawne Lamia, echoes the Soldier's and Poet's tales, as she explores a mystery into the heart of the TechnoCore and discovers that the AIs there have split into three factions, some of which are not friendly to human interests. In addition, her encounter with the reconstructed Romantic poet William Keats (who, after all, wrote "Hyperion," after which the planet is named) sets the stage for future events in the series.<br />
<br />
The final tale, that of the Consul, is in parts a retelling of a love story and of a revenge tale cloaked with layers of subterfuge. It is not as immediately gripping as most of the other tales, but it serves to reinforce reader suspicions about elements introduced in the other tales. It is a suitable concluding tale and with its ending, the pilgrims are at the final approach to the Time Tombs and whatever destiny may await them there. Simmons has at this point created six intriguing characters and six compelling tales, each that differ in tone and feel from the others. There are hints of deeper themes embedded in these tales, creating an enchanting narrative that leaves the reader eager to read the second volume, <i>The Fall of Hyperion</i>. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-20697407838704660012011-05-28T05:26:00.000-05:002011-05-28T05:26:00.886-05:00SF Masterworks #82: Jack Finney, The Body Snatchers<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOqJfuZEdjSBywEP2cXFhfiKqdP9S-HwNSPHlD9k5cD5wg7FxWtw4C0D9R65aksfB36yDbu6Yl5B7rT0vFwHAdtZygs2JjPsAiNSurOLLFRkYv6qQZD-tbja00pRBuy6sv9xGoeCUZCKk/s1600/Body+Snatchers.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOqJfuZEdjSBywEP2cXFhfiKqdP9S-HwNSPHlD9k5cD5wg7FxWtw4C0D9R65aksfB36yDbu6Yl5B7rT0vFwHAdtZygs2JjPsAiNSurOLLFRkYv6qQZD-tbja00pRBuy6sv9xGoeCUZCKk/s320/Body+Snatchers.jpg" width="207" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">I warn you that what you're starting to read is full of loose ends and unanswered questions. It will not be neatly tied up at the end, everything resolved and satisfactorily explained. Not by me it won't, anyway. Because I can't say I really know exactly what happened, or why, or just how it began, how it ended, or if it has ended; and I've been right in the thick of it. Now if you don't like that kind of story, I'm sorry, and you'd better not read it. All I can do is tell what I know. (p. 1)</blockquote><br />
Jack Finney's 1955 novel, <i>The Body Snatchers</i>, is one of those rare stories that are better known in their cinematic version. <i>The Invasion of the Body Snatchers</i>, released a year later, often is cited as an exemplar of 1950s cinema and its focus on paranoiac horror of the sudden invasion or inversion of American cultural values. Not being an avid film watcher, perhaps it is just as well that I have not seen either the original film or its remake, so I did not have those apparently iconic images of the aliens in mind when I read the 1955 version of Finney's story (he revised it in the 1970s, but for this edition, Gollancz elected to go with the first edition).<br />
<br />
The story begins in a small town in northern California, Santa Mira, in 1953 (coincidental with the first hydrogen bomb tests). Dr. Miles Bennell receives a frantic visit from Becky Driscoll, who informs him that her cousin Wilma is convinced that her Uncle Ira isn't who he claims to be. From here, a chain of events rapidly unfolds in which Miles and Becky uncover similar stories of displaced personalities, leading ultimately to the realization that townspeople have been replaced by aliens who have claimed the bodies and minds of their friends and neighbors. It is a story that can be either suspenseful or hokey, depending upon the narrative execution and for the most part, Finney manages to maintain a high level of intrigue for the duration of this short novel.<br />
<br />
One key to the story is the juxtaposition of the normal with the non-normal. Neighbors, friends, family - each familiar in their looks, their choice of words, and most of their mannerisms - have something peculiar about them, some sort of "offness" that puzzles before it frightens the inquisitive. Throughout <i>The Body Snatchers</i>, Miles and Becky experience this, including an episode in the town library when leafing through the newspaper archives for information on mysterious pods rumored to have appeared outside town:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif;">We turned to the May 7 issue and began with page one. There was nothing in the paper about Budlong or the pods. On the bottom half of the May 6 <i>Tribune</i>'s first page was a hole seven or eight inches long and three columns wide. On the bottom half of the May 5 issue was another hole, just about as long, but only two columns wide.<br />
<br />
It wasn't a guess, but a sudden stab of direct, intuitive knowledge - I <i>knew</i>, that's all - and I swung in my chair to stare across the room at Miss Wyandotte. She stood motionless behind the big desk, her eyes fastened on us, and in the instant I swung to look at her, her face was wooden, devoid of any expression, and the eyes were bright, achingly intent, and as inhumanly cold as the eyes of a shark. The moment was less than a moment - the flick of an eyelash - because instantly she smiled, pleasantly, inquiringly, her brows lifting in polite question. 'Anything I can do?' she said with the calm, interest eagerness typical of her in all the years I had known her. (p. 132)</blockquote><br />
Scenes like this, replete in the novel, provide it with a faint psychological horror. Who is "real" and who have been taken over? What is happening here? Who's next? These questions, asked and acted out for roughly 100 pages out of this 226 page novel, ratchet up the tension until Miles and Becky finally manage to make their way to the alien pods. It is at this point that the narrative tension collapses and things rush to a sudden and odd conclusion.<br />
<br />
Despite enjoying <i>The Body Snatchers</i> on the whole (and now being curious to see the cinematic versions at some point, despite my aversion to most cinema), the concluding chapters left much to be desired. There is not a suitable payoff for the psychological drama that had just unfolded with terrifying revelation after terrifying revelation. A simple, desperate action serves to end the story, leaving the reader wondering about the importance of the events before. This does not ruin the story as much as it deadens its effect, with such a simple, direct remedy for the terrifying takeovers. Finney's ending just feels out of sorts with the main body of the novel, as if at the end some other author had taken over his story and wrote something that felt incongruent with the rest of the novel.<br />
<br />
Some readers might be tempted to read <i>The Body Snatchers</i> as a commentary on the Red Scare of the mid-1950s and certainly there are elements within the story that would support this. However, the psychological aspect to the story removes it from the realm of direct political allegory and places it in a more nebulous conflict, one where the reader can imagine herself surrounded by familiar, menacing enemies. This aspect of <i>The Body Snatchers</i> makes it an enduring classic that has a relevance beyond its original 1950s milieu with much to offer to readers of the early 21st century.<br />
<br />
</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-51177601975585475792011-05-13T13:38:00.000-05:002011-05-13T13:38:45.951-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #12: Gene Wolfe, Sword and Citadel<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgswAQ1Qaas42gkN4ba25HrbBXQhZxQ9UQedmen-WFQymGTIFglOehTrzjjNl6w0xRtJTlESFlggDJiHJePy0SDXvdPJfqpZlU6oo81obIMoA5JxTOyR8PsPEj7tmyARRXeE5Xy51WzGO8/s1600/Sword+and+Citadel.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgswAQ1Qaas42gkN4ba25HrbBXQhZxQ9UQedmen-WFQymGTIFglOehTrzjjNl6w0xRtJTlESFlggDJiHJePy0SDXvdPJfqpZlU6oo81obIMoA5JxTOyR8PsPEj7tmyARRXeE5Xy51WzGO8/s320/Sword+and+Citadel.jpg" width="200" /></a></div><b>The Sword of the Lictor</b><br />
<br />
<span style="font-style: italic;">The Sword of the Lictor</span>, the third volume in Gene Wolfe's <span style="font-style: italic;">The Book of the New Sun</span> series, contains some of the most revealing and troublesome passages in the entire series. In this volume, readers begin to see somewhat clearly for the first time just how deeply layered Severian's adventures are and perhaps the astute reader can begin to sense the strings of narrative manipulation that are occurring both within and outside the written narrative. Since I shall be exploring a few passages and discussing certain events in great detail, it is highly suggested that those who have not yet read this volume refrain from reading it if they value plot details over thematic explorations.<br />
<br />
The storyline is again resumed after yet another break in the action. We learn that not only did Severian reach Thrax and assume the office of lictor (the office itself being fraught with religious and civic meanings dating back to the Roman Republic), but that Severian once again abandoned his post and was exiled on account of showing mercy to a female prisoner. As he and Dorcas (for a time, only) flee the city, they have a fierce discussion that ultimately leads to Dorcas's departure. Traveling alone, Severian has many encounters, from the fierce alzabo, from a gland in whose head the magical elixir used in the "diabolic eucharist" of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Claw of the Conciliator</span> is drawn, to the ultimate one with the giant Baldanders that concludes the volume.<br />
<br />
While these adventures may provide scenes of amazement and speculation for those reading it for the first time, I want to concentrate on a few lengthy passages from this volume that I believe holds much of importance for interpreting the off-stage events of this series. The first is from the second chapter, as Severian is reflecting upon the innate savagery of humans:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">One of the keepers of the Bear Tower once told me that there is no animal so dangerous or so savage and unmanageable as the hybrid resulting when a fighting dog mounts a she-wolf. We are accustomed to think of the beasts of the forest and mountain as wild, and to think of the men who spring up, as it seems, from their soil as savage. But the truth is that there is a wildness more vicious (as we would know better if we were not so habituated to it) in certain domestic animals, despite their understanding so much human speech and sometimes even speaking a few words; and there is a more profound savagery in men and women whose ancestors have lived in cities and towns since the dawn of humanity. Vodalus, in whose veins flowed the undefiled blood of a thousand exultants - exarchs, ethnarchs, and starosts - was capable of violence unimaginable to the autochthons that stalked the streets of Thrax, naked beneath their huanaco cloaks.<br />
<br />
Like the dog-wolves (which I never saw, because they were too vicious to be useful), these eclectics took all that was most cruel and ungovernable from their mixed parentage; as friends or followers they were sullen, disloyal, and contentious; as enemies, fierce, deceitful, and vindictive. So at least I had heard from my subordinates at the Vincula, for eclectics made up more than half the prisoners there. </span></blockquote><br />
<br />
Man's inhumanity to man. This is one of the oldest forms of conflict, as presented in innumerable literature classrooms across the globe over countless centuries. <span style="font-style: italic;">Homo homini lupus</span>, which Wolfe might have been hinting at in a double entendre form with his talk of the savage dog-wolves. This comment, when viewed in light of Agia's greed and implacable hatred of Severian in the first two volumes as well as the scene of Morwenna's public humiliation and execution in Saltus that opens <span style="font-style: italic;">The Claw of the Conciliator, </span>reinforces the notion that the ancient and exhausted world of Urth is just as full of hatred and pettiness as our own. The fact that it is an executioner making these observations only serves to underscore the irony behind the perhaps-misplaced faith that many have in the upward progression of humans via their own efforts.<br />
<br />
Severian's encounter with the two-head Typhon about two-thirds of the way into the novel serves to illustrate a related concept: that of the loss of freedom and the chimera of dominion. Typhon, former ruler of Urth and apparently other world chiliads (or thousands) of years before Severian's time, has been revived somehow by the power of the Claw (Typhon shall also be discussed later outside the New Sun series). He exists as he does due to his appropriation of the slave Piaton's body. This is but the first of many signs in the two short chapters that Typhon appears of the insidiousness of power and its corrupting influence on those who desire to wield it. Typhon, playing the role of the New Testament Satan, tempts Severian with the offer of control of Nessus in exchange for swearing allegiance to him. Severian, although sorely tempted, resists and literally casts out Typhon from the mountain top where the two had their confrontation. Although the religious parallels are obvious and do serve to reinforce many of the religious symbols presented in the earlier book, it is the notion of freedom as opposed to dominion that is central to this scene, as we shall soon see when Severian encounters two other people in his travels after this volume.<br />
<br />
Backtracking a bit to the discussion that Severian had with his little namesake (speculation abounds as to if this might be a parallel Severian from another time or even his own son, but I shall not weigh in on this, at least not for now), there is one other scene, rather lengthy, that I want to quote, as it underscores Wolfe's views on freedom and responsibility:<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;"><br />
"Severian, who were those men?"<br />
<br />
I knew whom he meant. "They were not men, although they were once men and still resemble men. They were zooanthrops, a word that indicates those beasts that are of human shape. Do you understand what I am saying?"<br />
<br />
The little boy nodded solemnly, then asked, "Why don't they wear clothes?"<br />
<br />
"Because they are no longer human beings, as I told you. A dog is born a dog and a bird is born a bird, but to become a human being is an achievement - you have to think about it. You have been thinking about it for the past three or four years at least, even though you may never have thought about the thinking."<br />
<br />
"A dog just looks for things to eat," the boy said.<br />
<br />
"Exactly. But that raises the question of whether a person should be forced to do such thinking, and some people decided a long time ago that he should not. We may force a dog, sometimes, to act like a man - to walk on his hind legs and wear a collar and so forth. But we shouldn't and couldn't force a man to act like a man. Did you ever want to fall asleep? When you weren't sleepy or even tired?"<br />
<br />
He nodded.<br />
<br />
"That was because you wanted to put down the burden of being a boy, at least for a time. Sometimes I drink too much wine, and that is because for a while I would like to stop being a man. Sometimes people take their own lives for that reason. Did you know that?"<br />
<br />
"Or they do things that might hurt them," he said. The way he said it told me of arguments overheard; Becan had very probably been that kind of man, or he would not have taken his family to so remote and dangerous a place.<br />
<br />
"Yes," I told him. "That can be the same thing. And sometimes certain men, and even women, come to hate the burden of thought, but without loving death. They see the animals and wish to become as they are, answering only to instinct, and not thinking. Do you know what makes you think?"<br />
<br />
"My head," the boy said promptly, and grasped it with his hands.<br />
<br />
"Animals have heads too - even very stupid animals like crayfish and oxen and ticks. What makes you think is only a small part of your head, inside, just above your eyes." I touched his forehead. "Now if for some reason you wanted one of your hands taken off, there are men you can go to who are skilled in doing that. Suppose, for example, your hand had suffered some hurt from which it would never be well. They could take it away in such a fashion that there would be little chance of any harm coming to the rest of you."<br />
<br />
The boy nodded.<br />
<br />
"Very well. Those same men can take away that little part of your head that makes you think. They cannot put it back, you understand. And even if they could, you couldn't ask them to do it, once that part was gone. But sometimes people pay these men to take that part away. They want to stop thinking forever, and often they say they wish to turn their backs on all that humanity has done. Then it is no longer just to treat them as human beings - they have become animals, though animals who are still of human shape. You asked why they did not wear clothes. They no longer understand clothes, and so they would not put them on, even if they were very cold, although they might lie down on them or even roll themselves up in them." </span></blockquote><br />
Cruelties happen. Harsh dictators like Typhon, only concerned with their well-being and status, occur from time to time in human history. At times, these people and those misfortunes are confronted. But when people abdicate their right to determine their own futures as best as they can, when they deny the common natures of other people and instead treat them in ways that we label as being "inhumane," when people abandon hope in favor for living any which way they live, are they in fact "human?" In this passage, as well as the one already cited above, Wolfe appears to be arguing that no, no they are not "human" in the sense of how people ought to be. These man-animals, the zooanthrops of this volume or the man-apes of <span style="font-style: italic;">Claw</span>, are the products of the self-dehumanization that Wolfe argues that occurs when one has given up their responsibility to be a true human being. This discussion, I believe, sets up the later discussions that Severian will have in <span style="font-style: italic;">Urth of the New Sun</span>. It bears repeating that freedom and self-determination are as much of an undercurrent in this series as are the religious symbols that appear. In fact, one might argue that the two are just two sides of the same coin.<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>The Citadel of the Autarch</b><br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">My memories have always appeared with the intensity, almost, of hallucinations, as I have said often in this chronicle. That night I felt I might lose myself forever in them, making of my life a loop instead of a line; and for once I did not resist the temptation but reveled in it. Everything I have described to you came crowding back to me, and a thousand things more. </span></blockquote><br />
<br />
This quote from the second chapter of the concluding volume to <span style="font-style: italic;">The Book of the New Sun</span>, <span style="font-style: italic;">The Citadel of the Autarch</span>, serves as a foreshadowing of what the reader (as well as Severian, of course) shall experience in the course of the reading. As the series winds to a close, events and people touched upon in the previous volumes return for a time, not to mention that there is a "loop" of an even more literal sense of the word that Severian experiences during the course of this novel. So with this in mind, those who have not yet read this volume may want to wait until they have read it, since there shall be some thematic discussions as well as my first extended look at the character/personalities of Severian himself.<br />
<br />
War is hell. It rends, it tears, it shreds its sometimes willing victims apart in ways that go beyond mere physical or emotional trauma. It is a product of two groups of people manipulating others into attempting to destroy one another. It is rather fitting that after the encounter with Typhon in <span style="font-style: italic;">The Sword of the Lictor</span> and Severian's clash with the giant Baldanders (where Severian's sword, <span style="font-style: italic;">Terminus Est</span>, is destroyed), we discover that Severian has gone north to where the forces of the Autarch are battling the Ascian invaders.<br />
<br />
Wolfe does not skimp on displaying the horrors of war, having himself been a Korean War veteran. We see not just touching elements such as Severian's discovery of a dead soldier's letter (perhaps intended to hark back to a similar scene in Erich Maria Remarque's classic World War I novel, <span style="font-style: italic;">All Quiet on the Western Front</span>), but also encounter soldiers from both sides of the conflict. While some might make the argument that the Ascian prisoner, Loyal to the Group of Seventeen is little more than a caricature of Cold War era representations of Soviet propagandists being like puppets parroting phrases learned over the course of a lifetime under an inhumane regime, I would counter by noting that this person, who in the story he tells "as translated" demonstrates quite a bit of awareness of the world, albeit shaped in a way that is very difficult for us to fathom. It is as though the worst hints of manipulation that we've seen in the earlier volumes have come to fruition in this rather decent person who cannot speak in more than platitudes that his homeland forced his people to adopt.<br />
<br />
But this book is much more than just about the horrors of war. In many senses, this book is devoted to reintroducing characters and showing them in new lights. For example, Severian's old nemesis, Agia, has grown in her time away from Severian. Where earlier she seemed to be devoted solely to her hatred of Severian, her actions and eventual escape from the climatic scene with the wounded Autarch puts her in a Vodalus-like opposition to Severian. It is no longer just a simple personal affair but rather that her opposition has come to symbolize a sort of selfish, "anti-life" rebellion similar to that of Vodalus's against the Autarch, which Wolfe makes explicitly clear in a passage near the end of the book.<br />
<br />
We also learn more about Dorcas and her tragic reunion with her now-elderly husband, plus we get further hints in regards to Severian's paternal ancestry. While Dr. Talos and Baldanders do not appear in this volume, there are more than enough hints given that the two represent artifice and its counterfeit nature against the "trueness" that is represented in the Autarchs. And speaking of the Autarchs, or "self-rulers," while much more about their origins is explained in the coda <span style="font-style: italic;">Urth of the New Sun</span>, it becomes quite obvious by the end of the volume that they are the rightful rulers of Urth because they recognize that rule involves much more than just dominion over another. It involves a self-sacrifice and a heavy burden of sacrifice and commitment to the needs of others. It is for this reason, Severian reminisces, that the Autarchs have not been descended from a prior Autarch but have come from people of human origin who usually are not the greatest in any of their fields. After all, pride is an insidious thing that can emerge from the glories of greatness and greatness often is antithetical to being truly concerned with the rights of all.<br />
<br />
And so over the course of these four volumes, the reader has encountered many base and treacherous characters. From greed and the thirst for dominion over others, we have seen people such as Vodalus, Agia, and Typhon <span style="font-style: italic;">lust</span>. There is no love involved in their quests for power and, in Typhon's case, immortality. We have also sensed that behind this lurks the nihilistic impulses of Abaia and Erebus, those aptly-named beings who symbolize the darkness and coldness which threaten not just the physical Urth but also the spiritual well-being of its inhabitants. We have witnessed the results in the persons of the Ascians, as Severian so eloquently notes in this passage:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">These Ascian soldiers had a rigity, a will-less attachment to order, that I have never seen elsewhere, and that appeared to me to have no roots in either spirit or discipline as I understand them. They seemed to obey because they could not conceive of any other course of action. </span></blockquote>But opposed to these horrors is a sense of responsibility and of duty to be just and to love what can be loved among the peoples and creatures of Urth. Much has been made about the calls for the New Sun over the course of the novels (and much more of this in <span style="font-style: italic;">Urth of the New Sun</span>), but in the scene where the last Autarch passes along his responsibilities to Severian, there is a passage that sums up quite well the good/evil conflict that has occurred:<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;"><br />
"You were right to hate me, Severian. I stand...as you will stand...for so much that is wrong."<br />
<br />
"Why?" I asked. "<span style="font-style: italic;">Why?</span>" I was on my knees beside him.<br />
<br />
"Because all else is worse. Until the New Sun comes, we have but a choice of evils. All have been tried, and all have failed. Goods in common, the rule of the people...everything. You wish for progress? The Ascians have it. They are deafened by it, crazed by the death of Nature till they are ready to accept Erebus and the rest as gods. We hold humankind stationary...in barbarism. The Autarch protects the people from the exultants, and the exultants...shelter them from the Autarch. The religious comfort them. We have closed the roads to paralyze the social order..."<br />
<br />
His eyes fell shut. I put my hand upon his chest to feel the faint stirring of his heart.<br />
<br />
"Until the New Sun..."<br />
<br />
This was what I had sought to escape, not Agia or Vodalus or the Ascians. As gently as I could, I lifted the chain from his neck, unstoppered the vial and swallowed the drug. Then with that short, stiff blade I did what had to be done. </span></blockquote>There are no clear-cut decisions to be made; only a choice of evils. Urth is an imperfect world and each choice is fraught with evil possibilities or consequences. In such a world, it is hard to hold hope, Wolfe seems to be arguing, but yet, somehow, people have managed to do so. <span style="font-style: italic;">Until the New Sun</span>. A phrase laden with symbolic meanings of rebirth and renewal. A phrase that hints at the washing away of the old creation in ways akin to the language of Revelations. And who is to bring this New Sun?<br />
<br />
No other than Severian. A Torturer who shows mercy in spite of the strictures placed on him. A self-deceiving and not always likable person who has undergone so many changes during the course of his travels. A person who finds a holy relic, only at the end to learn this:<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;"><br />
At that time I did not think of it, being filled with wonder - but may it not be that we were guided to the unfinished Sand Garden? I carried the Claw even then, though I did not know it; Agia had already slipped it under the closure of my sabretache. Might it not be that we came to the unfinished garden so that the Claw, flying as it were against the wind of Time, might make its farewell? The idea is absurd. But then, all ideas are absurd.<br />
<br />
What struck me on the beach and it struck me indeed, so that I staggered as at a blow - was that if the Eternal Principle had rested in that curbed thorn I had carried about my neck across so many leagues, and if it now rested in the new thorn (perhaps the same thorn) I had only now put there, then it might rest in anything, and in fact probably did rest in everything, in every thorn on every bush, in every drop of water in the sea. The thorn was a sacred Claw because all thorns were sacred Claws; the sand in my boots was sacred sand because it came from a beach of sacred sand. The cenobites treasured up the relics of the sannyasins because the sannyasins had approached the Pancreator. But everything had approached and even touched the Pancreator, because everything had dropped from his hand. Everything was a relic. All the world was a relic. I drew off my boots, that had traveled with me so far, and threw them into the waves that I might not walk shod on holy ground. </span></blockquote>We have come full-circle; the symbols that shaped Severian's journey have mostly been unraveled. We create relics, Wolfe appears to argue, because we need them to remind us of the Increate/Pancreator. We need material things to remind us of the spiritual, for which we ever seem to be grasping. Severian is not a perfect man, but he has sought to relieve himself of his impurities. He has been through the fires of temptation, especially with Typhon, but now he is changed. He is not a Christ, but he certainly has become the ideal of a Christian, some might argue based on Wolfe's liberal sprinkling of Christian symbols throughout the narrative.<br />
<br />
And that rose carved into that tombstone? It is a symbol for Catholics and Eastern Orthodox for the Virgin Mary and also for Christ. The fountain? It is the well-spring of the Water of Life, or of the Christ of St. John 7. The spaceship? It symbolizes the next step in Severian's life.<br />
<br />
And the tomb itself? It is empty. Not the way that Christ's tomb is empty, but empty nonetheless due to the matter of time (which is addressed in <span style="font-style: italic;">Urth of the New Sun</span>). Hopefully these reviews have encouraged people to re-read and to re-consider this masterpiece of literature. I know I did not touch upon everything and that some of my interpretations certainly can be challenged. Nonetheless, a work like this deserves nothing less than honest people arguing over matters of interpretation, no? <b> </b><b> </b></div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-59620788141122797292011-05-13T13:32:00.000-05:002011-05-13T13:32:12.873-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #1: Gene Wolfe, Shadow and Claw<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqajjFzkeXtVG55THUMs7i2465EsRiauyqcb1qXZA88Iw833vCCzkqIYo3Xf63hbGktbDWcRHB0S749JBFcIzr8P7Rn_g2oZOGooUM50HYOYm1Ec5vRbFNZcDWYAK1eWwBEr23UHAsCaE/s1600/Shadow+and+Claw.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqajjFzkeXtVG55THUMs7i2465EsRiauyqcb1qXZA88Iw833vCCzkqIYo3Xf63hbGktbDWcRHB0S749JBFcIzr8P7Rn_g2oZOGooUM50HYOYm1Ec5vRbFNZcDWYAK1eWwBEr23UHAsCaE/s320/Shadow+and+Claw.jpg" width="200" /></a></div>The four-volume <span style="font-style: italic;">The Book of the New Sun</span> is widely considered to be Gene Wolfe's magnus opus and it consistently ranks as one of the most highly-regarded literary works of the past 30 years. Blending elements of science-fiction and fantasy into a first-person narrative, these four volumes (<span style="font-style: italic;">The Shadow of the Torturer</span> (1980); <span style="font-style: italic;">The Claw of the Conciliator</span> (1981); <span style="font-style: italic;">The Sword of the Lictor</span> (1981); and <span style="font-style: italic;">The Citadel of the Autarch</span> (1982)) have won or been nominated for multiple World Fantasy and Nebula Awards. Filled with allusions to creation myths, Christianity, hagiography, the Cold War, etc., these books have provided fodder for all sorts of speculation as to what lay underneath the surface of the narrative.<br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="font-weight: bold;">The Shadow of the Torturer</span><br />
<br />
The epigraph to this book holds an important clue towards one of the themes of this series, that of religious parousia (or the Second Coming) and eschatology (or the belief in the "end times" of the world as we know it):<br />
<br />
<pre style="font-family: times new roman;"><blockquote><span style="font-size: 85%;">A thousand ages, in thy sight,
are like an evening gone;
short as the watch that ends the night,
before the rising sun.
</span></blockquote></pre>Taken from the fourth stanza of Isaac Watts's famous hymn, "<a href="http://www.hymnsite.com/lyrics/umh117.sht">O God, Our Help in Ages Past</a>," this epigraph highlights the religious imagery and metaphors that will appear repeatedly during the course of these four volumes, albeit many of these religious symbols will be kept to the background and the reader can enjoy the story without needing to be well-versed in Christian (and especially Catholic) theology and traditions.<br />
<br />
The story itself begins near the end of the narrative timeline. The main character, Severian, has just finished recording a narrative of his adventures that led him from being an apprentice (later journeyman) of the ancient guild of the Seekers for Truth and Penitence, more commonly known as the Torturers. Severian, who tells this tale in first-person PoV, claims to have an eidetic, or "perfect," memory. As he narrates his life from growing up as an orphan among the Torturers to his coming of age, he reveals in passing certain discoveries that will later play a role near the end of the series. Among these is his playing in the necropolis of the ancient city of Nessus and his discovery of a tomb that has etched upon it the likenesses of a rose, a fountain, and a spaceship. These shall be discussed later.<br />
<br />
However, there is a scene at the end of the first chapter where the boy Severian receives a coin from the rebel Vodalus. Severian makes an interesting observation that will bear heavily upon the importance of the events that follow:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">We believe that we invent symbols. The truth is that they invent us; we are their creatures, shaped by their hard, defining edges. When soldiers take their oath they are given a coin, an asimi stamped with the profile of the Autarch. Their acceptance of that coin is their acceptance of the special duties and burdens of military life - they are soldiers from that moment, though they may know nothing of the management of arms. I did not know that then, but it is a profound mistake to believe that we must know of such things to be influenced by them, and in fact to believe so is to believe in the most debased and superstitious kind of magic. The would-be sorcerer alone has faith in the efficacy of pure knowledge; rational people know that things act of themselves or not at all. </span></blockquote>It is this self-defining of ourselves, of our surroundings, and of our "purposes" and how each affects the characters' interactions with each other and their surroundings that drives much of the action that occurs. From Severian's later acquisition of a religious relic, the legendary Claw of the Conciliator (who in presented as being an analogue to Christ although not in a direct one-to-one correlation), to how others refer to the blasted and diseased red sun of ancient Urth and the belief that one day that the Conciliator would "return" to bring a "New Sun" (literal, metaphorical, or both depending upon the person), this notion that we are defined by the symbols we choose to represent our hopes and fears is one that Wolfe returns to on multiple occasions in the course of the series.<br />
<br />
One such example of this symbolic interplay is that of Katharine (St. Catherine of Alexandria), who is the patroness of the Torturers. From the slightly altered re-enactment of her martyrdom to the quite ironic adoption of her as being the patroness of the Torturers, the symbolic execution and the expression of faith done through such a re-enactment serve to underscore Severian's later betrayal of his guild via the forbidden showing of mercy to an exultant (high-born, genetically altered nobility on Urth) lady, the Chatelaine Thecla. It is this "betrayal," perhaps akin to some degree with the scene of Jesus and the adulteress in the Gospels, that leads to a journey of exile for Severian.<br />
<br />
During this exile/assignation to the city of Thrax, where Severian is to be the Lictor (or executioner) in lieu of being held in hopes of a death sentence, Severian meets up with many characters, from the vengeful Agia to the monstrous Baldanders and his companion Dr. Taltos to many others. One of the more mysterious characters is that of Dorcas, who lives up to her namesake when somehow she is "revived" when Severian finds himself diving into a pond to retrieve his sword <span style="font-style: italic;">Terminus Est</span> (more on that shortly). The latter volumes hints not just at the healing powers of the Claw of the Conciliator, but also at the tangled skein of Severian's own personal past.<br />
<br />
When Severian was presented with the executioner's sword <span style="font-style: italic;">Terminus Est</span>, the presentation of its meanings (line of division, this is the end) illustrates Severian's role. Not only is he the executioner of those sentenced to die, not only is he the final image of authority that the condemned see before they die, but the name itself refers to the old Roman god Terminus, the lord of boundaries. In this case, the boundary between life and death and their interrelationships with each other are symbolized with how Severian uses the sword during the course of his travels.<br />
<br />
While I certainly could continue to narrate various symbolic actions during the course of this first volume, I want to focus instead on a discussion Severian has near the end of this book with the apparent shade/ghost/image of one of his former Masters, Malrubius:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">"Severian. Name for me the seven principles of goverance."<br />
<br />
It was an effort for me to speak, but I managed (in my dream, if it was a dream) to say, "I do not recall that we have studied such a thing, Master."<br />
<br />
"You were always the most careless of my boys," he told me, and fell silent.<br />
<br />
A foreboding grew on me; I sensed that if I did not reply, some tragedy would occur. At last I began weakly, "Anarchy..."<br />
<br />
"That is not governance, but the lack of it. I taught you that it precedes all governance. Now list the seven sorts."<br />
<br />
"Attachment to the person of the monarch. Attachment to a bloodline or other sequence of succession. Attachment to the royal state. Attachment to a code legitimizing the governing state. Attachment to the law only. Attachment to a greater or lesser board of electors, as framers of the law. Attachment to an abstraction conceived as including the body of electors, other bodies giving rise to them, and numerous other elements, largely ideal."<br />
<br />
"Tolerable. Of these, which is the earliest form, and which the highest?"<br />
<br />
"The development is in the order given, Master," I said. "But I do not recall that you ever asked before which was highest."<br />
<br />
Master Malrubius leaned forward, his eyes burning brighter than the coals of the fire. "Which is highest, Severian?"<br />
<br />
"The last, Master?"<br />
<br />
"You mean attachment to an abstraction conceived as including the body of electors, other bodies giving rise to them, and numerous other elements, largely ideal?"<br />
<br />
"Yes, Master."<br />
<br />
"Of what kind, Severian, is your own attachment to the Divine Entity?"<br />
<br />
I said nothing. It may have been that I was thinking; but if so, my mind was much too filled with sleep to be conscious of its thought. Instead, I became profoundly aware of my physical surroundings. The sky above my face in all its grandeur seemed to have been made solely for my benefit, and to be presented for my inspection now. I lay upon the ground as upon a woman, and the very air that surrounded me seemed a thing as admirable as crystal and as fluid as wine.<br />
<br />
"Answer me, Severian."<br />
<br />
"The first, if I have any."<br />
<br />
"To the person of the monarch?"<br />
<br />
"Yes, because there is no succession."<br />
<br />
"The animal that rests beside you now would die for you. Of what kind is his attachment to you?"<br />
<br />
"The first?"<br />
<br />
There was no one there. I sat up. Malrubius and Triskele had vanished, yet my side felt faintly warm. </span></blockquote><br />
This scene reveals quite a bit, not just about how Severian orders his priorities in accordance to a hierarchy of legal standards, but more about how this attachment to the Divine in the personal form not only foreshadows what occurs later, but also how it symbolizes the views that the religious have in regards to matters of faith. This concept of ordering the power relationships not only refers back to the medieval Great Chain of Being, but it can also symbolize yet again the passage that I quoted at the beginning of this post.<br />
<br />
<b>The Claw of the Conciliator</b><br />
<br />
Thecla, the Chateleine who once was was the Autarch's leman (in this specific example, quasi lover, as we shall see later in this volume) before being seized and brought to the Torturers because of certain papers that implicated her as being associated with Vodalus, is in many senses the half-overlooked center of this series. We only learn the basics about her torture and how the diabolical Revolutionary drove away her will to live. I did not note it in the first review, but one could make an argument that the Revolutionary serves to represent our tendency to find faults in ourselves, often to the point of us committing what many Christians might call the most insidious of the Seven Deadly Sins, that of sloth/despair. In the course of the narrative, Severian stops at the point of exploring just what were the exact effects of the Revolutionary, but based on his passing comments, the hypothesis that I presented above might be developed from it.<br />
<br />
Thecla's personality, which later we learn is often petty and cruel, is important not so much because we "witnessed" her torture and suicide, but because of a recurrent theme in this volume, one that was hinted at earlier with Dorcas's rising from the pond: resurrection of the body. A great many of the events that occur in this volume revolve in some point around the resurrection of the body or soul, or conversely, around the decay and corruption of both body and mind.<br />
<br />
Jonas, a companion from afar who joins Severian near the end of the first volume, is one such example. Wounded in an attack about two-thirds into this volume, Jonas's body of cells and metal represents a sort of a reverse cyborg; a machine clothing itself in human parts in order to repair some prior damage. Severian's attempts to "heal" Jonas are only partial, but this melding of the biological with the mechanical in the person of Jonas perhaps could be viewed as a metaphor for the interactions between the physical body and the spiritual soul. However, the text is ambiguous on this point and I do not have citations to present to support this point.<br />
<br />
Jolenta, the Nessus barmaid who becomes part of Dr. Taltos and Baldanders's travelling troupe, serves as an example of this mind/body union. Altered by Dr. Taltos's arts, she has become a thing of beauty and of desire, but yet there is a sickness within that mutates from a metaphorical matter into a very real and visible disorder near the end of the book. Her façade has crumbled and what we see then is now related to what the astute reader might have perceived soon after the first encounter with her after her transformation.<br />
<br />
Dr. Talos, that mad scientist whose skills have managed to create simulacra of life, beauty, and truth. The composer of that play near the end which serves to foreshadow the concluding two volumes of Severian's saga. The fox-like creature, so clever and so manipulative, the apparent source of so much subterfuge. I have read elsewhere that some have postulated that Talos is based on the mythological Cretan creature of bronze that guarded the island, while others have noted his role as artificer as being but an extension of this attempt to replicate life via mechanical means. I side more with this second explanation, as Talos (and by extension, Baldanders) seem at first to have goals so similar to the more mystical bringing of the New Sun (or the second blooming of life on Urth), but whose means betray their real end goals.<br />
<br />
By now, perhaps you are weary of my digressions and wondering just why I haven't discussed the plot of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Claw of the Conciliator</span>. While it may seem as though I have digressed and not have attempted to explore the "story" of this novel and its strengths and weaknesses, in many ways I have covered just that, albeit via those seeming detours of character study. While <span style="font-style: italic;">The Claw of the Conciliator</span> certain can be read on the surface level as the continued travels of Severian and friends from the gates of Nessus to the outliers of Thrax, to understand why the multitude of events such as Severian's second meeting with Vodalus and what transpired there occurred the way they did means adopting some of Severian's own approaches towards telling his story.<br />
<br />
There were quite a few lacunae in this tale. Not only does the opening chapter pick up on the other side of those colossal gates of Nessus, in the town of Saltus (some commentators have noted that since the action apparently is set in South America, that Nessus may be the corruption of Buenos Aires and Saltus may be the alteration of the Argentine province/town of Salta), but the tone of the narrative changes. The careful reader has already noted, doubtless, that while Severian's eidetic memory has left him sharing all sorts of petty little details such as the stories from the brown book from Ultan's library in Nessus that he took after Thecla's suicide and his banishment to Thrax, there is so much that he is skipping or deigning to downplay. The open lies and lies by omission that will later become a hallmark of Severian's character are more on display here.<br />
<br />
Also, the scene about halfway into the novel where Vodalus and his associates invite Severian to partake in what Wolfe later called a "<a href="http://members.bellatlantic.net/%7Evze2tmhh/wolfejbj.html">diabolical eucharist</a>" of consuming Thecla's body while drinking an elixir from an alien creature known as the alzabo (more on that in the next volume) is a turning point in the narrative. Lies of omission or not, the Severian "voice" that we have encountered to date appears to be singular in nature, but slowly after this scene, the thoughts and personality of the consumed Thecla emerge and occasionally the "Severian" we encounter on the pages of the book is somehow different; sometimes Thecla in tone, sometimes Severian, other times an amalgamation of the two. This partaking of the body and receiving something of the mind/spirit of the deceased is a sort of a perversion, some might say, of the Catholic/Orthodox doctrine of the Real Presence of the Christ in the wine and bread consumed in the Eucharist. It certainly something whose ramifications will become more evident in the succeeding volumes.<br />
<br />
As I said earlier, resurrection motifs abound in this volume. From the healing of the man-apes (how <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> those creatures evolve or perhaps devolve over time?) to the partial healing of Jonas to the nigh-useless attempt on Jolenta, the blue gem that Severian carries, the legendary Claw of the Conciliator, serves to highlight this theme of healing in the midst of death and suffering. While I will address the theme of suffering later in the review of the second omnibus, it bears to keep this matter in mind as one reads these volumes.<br />
<br />
The allusion-filled play near the end that Severian, Dorcas, Jolenta, Dr. Talos, and Baldanders perform (before I forget, there are a couple of scenes that I'm purposely leaving out as I need to wait until the fourth volume to discuss them at length) serves to foreshadow what lies underneath the journey of the exiled journeyman Torturer. From the Persian names for Adam and Eve to the mention of the "dawn" of Ushas (herself a Hindu deity of the dawn), the eschatological interpretation of the New Sun is presented in a way that seems opaque at first, but which yields so much fruit once the series is complete. Since I am writing this review with those who have just finished reading <span style="font-style: italic;">Shadow and Claw </span>for the first time, I will pause here. After all, the road again is not an easy one to travel. <b> </b> </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-60027196921887499822011-04-03T18:20:00.000-05:002011-04-03T18:20:18.260-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #4: Jack Vance, Tales of the Dying Earth<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiukN0k7yhOkNTP0b7LS_3-PyXaj60LnOw4RN26WUd4pQ3J11ypLpJBT25JP-PLl9URXTUnGfB5xHWBAFIIU6CRil58xfI1fL3tA1VMbEhNIro_V6sxjsGJQUAOSb5OhpNWP73r5lxwfVc/s1600/Tales+of+the+Dying+Earth.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiukN0k7yhOkNTP0b7LS_3-PyXaj60LnOw4RN26WUd4pQ3J11ypLpJBT25JP-PLl9URXTUnGfB5xHWBAFIIU6CRil58xfI1fL3tA1VMbEhNIro_V6sxjsGJQUAOSb5OhpNWP73r5lxwfVc/s1600/Tales+of+the+Dying+Earth.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote><span style="font-size: 85%;">"In ages gone," the Sage had said, his eyes fixed on a low star, "a thousand spells were known to sorcery and the wizards effected their wills. Today, as Earth dies, a hundred spells remain to man's knowledge, and these have come to us through the ancient books...But there is one called Pandelume, who knows all the spells, all the incantations, cantraps, runes, and thaumaturgies that have ever wrenched and molded space..." He had fallen silent, lost in his thoughts. (p. 4)</span></blockquote>There is something powerful about a ruin. Seeing grandeur cast down, witnessing the failing of a majestic vision, viewing a ruin inspires in many a mixture of wonder and contempt. Who could have created such majestic structures so long ago? What sort of folly befell this civilization for only broken, ivy-covered remnants remaining to serve notice of that culture's collapse? Does such a fate await our own?<br />
<br />
Jack Vance in the four stories collected in his <span style="font-style: italic;">Tales from the Dying Earth</span> takes these questions and fast-forwards things millions of years into the Earth's future, to a time in which the Earth's resources have been exhausted and its inhabitants live among the ruins of civilizations about which they know less than we do of the ancient Egyptians or Chinese. For them, Arthur C. Clarke's adage about advanced technology being scarcely distinguishable from magic in the eyes of those who cannot comprehend the technology being employed holds true.<br />
<br />
The four stories in this omnibus, <span style="font-style: italic;">The Dying Earth</span> (1950), <span style="font-style: italic;">The Eyes of the Overworld</span> (1966), <span style="font-style: italic;">Cugel's Saga</span> (1983), and <span style="font-style: italic;">Rhialto the Marvellous</span> (1984), share little in common with one another except the same far-future setting and in the case of the middle two volumes, the protagonist called Cugel. While I knew going in that these stories were best viewed as being separate tales that perhaps ought to be considered separately, as a whole I found myself struggling at times with the stories.<br />
<br />
I've had this omnibus for almost five years now, but I never could get beyond the first pages of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Eyes of the Overworld</span> before putting it down in favor of another book. The first volume's rather dated narrative approach (it feels like an odd inversion of the action/adventure stories in the stamp of an Edgar Rice Burroughs in its exotic-yet-somehow-familiar setting and the 1930s-style matinee adventure hero) was trying enough, despite at times Vance's prose rising above that rather pedestrian level. But there was something about Cugel at the time that just irritated me. While on this most recent read, where I sat down one afternoon and just forced myself to keep reading despite my attention waning at times, Cugel's banter seemed more palatable, it wasn't until the very end of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Eyes of the Overworld</span> that I began to warm to Cugel's rakish charm.<br />
<br />
<span style="font-style: italic;">Cugel's Saga</span>, however, dashed that charitable feeling. At nearly 300 pages, it was by far the longest of the four tales, and I just felt as though the story dragged the entire time. While there were occasional sharp, witty exchanges between Cugel and those around him, on the whole the story just felt lifeless to me, as if it were just one more foray for Cugel, one more time into the breach, but with nothing of import to show for it. By the time I reached the final tale, <span style="font-style: italic;">Rhialto the Marvellous</span>, I just was eager to finish the damn thing. In the end, I think I made the worse decision by pushing on, leaving me to write something that was more akin to a confession that this tale didn't work for me and that at least part of the problem lay with my own past problems with a few elements early in the omnibus.<br />
<br />
Will I try again in the future? Perhaps, since I hate the fact that I disengaged myself from processing this book about halfway through and that there is that suspicion that if I had tried just a bit harder, I could have wrung something from it other than the feeling that this collection was rather disjointed and that dying earth stories have been done better by those who followed Vance than by Vance himself. However, it'll be some time (likely a couple of years at least), but if I do try again, I'll at least try to accentuate the positive more than I did here. Certainly not the "masterwork" in terms of prose or characterization that his other Masterworks titles, the <i>Lyonesse</i> and <i>Emphyrio</i> titles, prove to be.</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-85917340930114031782011-03-29T21:27:00.000-05:002011-03-29T21:27:54.610-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #32: Poul Anderson, The Broken Sword<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwd1Gqijff2uxbSZOaDgvH48G8Bk4M8C4xwj4Deaajat-L8hPO3EzD0lh6H3LD-e5wqYR6olzF0eUlwL-a-wbv6dB4i9pugwFI0rU0yhgkjy-6NlgPRNPDWrT3XgbOdzCvIrqR5da9f4w/s1600/Broken+Sword.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgwd1Gqijff2uxbSZOaDgvH48G8Bk4M8C4xwj4Deaajat-L8hPO3EzD0lh6H3LD-e5wqYR6olzF0eUlwL-a-wbv6dB4i9pugwFI0rU0yhgkjy-6NlgPRNPDWrT3XgbOdzCvIrqR5da9f4w/s1600/Broken+Sword.jpg" /></a></div><span style="font-size: 85%;">"The world is flesh dissolving off a dead skull," mumbled the troll-woman. She clanked her chain and lay back, shuddering. "Birth is but the breeding of maggots in the crumbling flesh. Already the skull's teeth leer forth, and black crows have left its eye-sockets empty. Soon a barren wind will blow through its bare white bones." She howled as Imric closed the door. "He is waiting for me, he is waiting on the hill where the mist blows ragged on the wind, for nine hundred years has he waited. The black cock crows - "<br />
<br />
Imric locked the door anew and hastened up the stairs. He had no liking for making changelings, but the chance of getting a human baby was too rare to lose. (p. 13)</span>Although I had heard of Poul Anderson and had seen his second novel, <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> (1954), praised by authors such as Michael Moorcock, I never got around to buying a copy of this book until a few weeks ago, after I read Richard Morgan's <a href="http://www.suvudu.com/2009/02/the-real-fantastic-stuff-an-essay-by-richard-k-morgan.html">Suvudu article</a> on his problems with J.R.R. Tolkien. In the furor that emerged there and on various blogs and forums, Morgan mentioned Anderson as an author who wrote a more "authentic" [my word for what Morgan was describing, although he might have used it in one of the numerous exchanges last month] fantasy that did not provide a cop-out, consolatory ending, but instead was the <span style="font-style: italic;">other</span> Norse-influenced fantasy novel of 1954 that kept most of those sagas' <span style="font-style: italic;">Götterdämmerung </span>elements in the narrative. Curious to know if Morgan's high praise of Anderson was merited, I imported a copy of the Gollancz Fantasy Masterworks edition of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> to see what my initial impressions would be. <br />
<br />
When I wrote my <a href="http://ofblog.blogspot.com/2009/03/reflecting-on-tolkien-return-of-king.html">reflective essays on Tolkien</a>, I kept referring back to the occasional problems that I would have with Tolkien's prose, or rather with the opaqueness that often would occur when Tolkien would shift to a more archaic, formal narrative voice. I found that this, combined with said language often being tied in to Tolkien's introduction of his invented historical events to the narrative, to be a distraction that detracted from the "present" story. Anderson also utilizes a narrative voice that resembles that of the old Norse sagas. However, this prose style enhances the story rather than weakening it, due to Anderson's story being set in a slightly-fantasized England of the earliest Norse sagas of the 8th and 9th centuries CE.<br />
<br />
The quote at the beginning of this essay illustrates how well Anderson uses this literary mode. The elf lord, Imric, seeks to have a changeling replace the newborn human child of Orm the Strong, Valgard, as humans fostered in the elvish Alfheim are of great use against the elves' primary enemies, the trolls. But instead of spelling it out in laborious detail, as might be expected if Anderson had used contemporary prose styles, his use of a quasi-epic poetic style forces the reader to consider the import of each word. In the passage quoted above, the changeling Valgard is the product of a cruel rape. The troll mother's hate-filled lament takes on the form of a prophecy, with death's skull and suffering's barren wind conjuring images of devastation without any hope of redress.<br />
<br />
This passage and a later one introducing the titular broken sword presage fell and horrific tragedies to follow. Just as many of the Norse sagas contained horrific <span style="font-style: italic;">weirds</span> and mass slaughtering, so too does Anderson's take on this ancient narrative form. The stolen child, renamed Skafloc, and his changeling double, Valgard, have intertwined fates that involve each losing everything near and dear to them. Anderson is unrelenting with their characters, showing each to be pawns in greater games being played by the old gods against the growing menance of the White Christ, whose cross is the bane of elf, troll, and god alike, as well as them being tools of the elves and trolls in their immemorial battles for supremacy over the other. While at times these two characters come perilously close to being cardboard cutouts of dynamic, conflicted characters, for the most part I found myself caught up in their personality differences. Each is the mirror of the other. If Valgard be sullen and quick to enter the bezerker rage, Skafloc is a smooth, seductive operator. If Skafloc be comfortable with his role as Imric's foster human child, Valgard never manages to fit in with Orm's other children. Anderson masterfully uses their disparate character traits to drive the plot towards its damning, bloody end.<br />
<br />
The broken sword itself is an intriguing plot element. A mysterious gift to Imric, its fell destiny as being the accursed weapon that Skafloc is fated to use to tragic effect stands out in comparison to Tolkien's Ring. Both are "evil" artifacts, but whereas Tolkien's Ring could be seen as a metaphor for the glamors cast by temptation, Anderson's sword, later forged anew, can be viewed as being a representation of fate and of the tragic suffering that humans will endure, whether it be at the hands of gods, chance, or humans themselves. Take for instance this passage after Valgard discovers his true origins:<br />
<br />
<blockquote><span style="font-size: 85%;">"I am strong," he growled, deep in his throat. "When I was a viking, I broke men with my bare hands. And I have no fear in battle, and I am cunning. Many victories have I won, and I will win many more."<br />
<br />
His hands fell slackly to his lap and his eyes darkened with horror. "But what of that?" he whispered. "What of that? <span style="font-style: italic;">Why</span> am I so? Because Imric made me thus. He molded me into the image of Orm's son. I am alive for no other reason, and all my strength and looks and brain are - Skafloc's!"<br />
<br />
He stumbled to his feet. Blindly he stared before him, and his voice rose to a scream: <span style="font-style: italic;">"What am I but the shadow of Skafloc?"</span> (p. 241)</span></blockquote>Here Valgard takes on the role of the accursed victim of fate, one doomed to kill those around him. It is a bleak, tragic life, one that is portrayed in turns as being sympathetic and loathsome. I found myself drawn to this solitary character, reminded of another Tolkien character, that of Túrin. But whereas Tolkien's Túrin finds momentary pleasures that simultaneously lessen and increase the magnitude of his black fate, Anderson's Valgard has no moments of cheer, no hopes of love, nothing but an almost nihilistic desire to have all symbols of his past erased by fire and his axe. Skafloc, however, with his fated encounter with Freda, balances Valgard's unrelenting darkness by his gradual fall from a diffident playboy type to a suffering, love-stricken fool whose love proves to be another example of fate's capricious cruelty. As a tragedy, <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> is one of the earliest (and best) produced in fantasy literature.<br />
<br />
The conclusion to <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> fulfills the promise of the earlier plot revelations and of the characters' intertwined, mirrored personalities. As rage and suffering builds throughout the final third of this 274 page novel, the narrative becomes more taut, as the plot tension is distilled into short, terse paragraphs that pack a strong punch. The formerly-broken sword's trecherousness is revealed and the Skafloc/Valgard duo discover this in ways true to their characters. There is no sense of "closure," only that their tragic tale is but one small part in a greater, unfolding tragedy that is destined to spill out into all the realms at some indeterminate date.<br />
<br />
Although I worried that reading <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> less than a week after finishing <span style="font-style: italic;">The Lord of the Rings</span> might lessen the effect on me, I found the opposite to be true. I can see why critics of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Lord of the Rings</span> (the story of <span style="font-style: italic;">The Silmarillion</span> is a different matter to be addressed at a future date) blast him for not going far enough with his narrative at times, "settling" for narrative cop-outs that fail to meet the promise of the set-up. Anderson certainly does not shy away from showing the trials and tribulations suffered by his characters. They are not saints, but neither are they empty malevolent ciphers. Instead, by showing them as lusty, hearty characters, Anderson breathed life into Skafloc and Valgard and the characters surrounding them, enabling the reader to be caught up in their tragic tale. It is a shame that <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Sword</span> is out of print in the United States, as I believe there is a market for this sort of dark, brooding fantasy, one that can serve as a complement (if not a straight alternative) to the sort of epic fantasy influenced by Tolkien. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-69383480412597550622011-03-27T20:02:00.000-05:002011-03-27T20:02:51.449-05:00Fantasy Masterworks #28: Gene Wolfe, Peace<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_4OfnSNEQYVdfyL1kL7T_5R7aeBkfGjA6rmtLmMxqT_2X1t-Fdzfuq9mkGUqdJ53ZLmvORPYAs_6g-GdhZOJSMib_V44K7w5osPi8zIjgYwVWDBq4cBUNrmrIacpvTeF0o7GJHpThkfg/s1600/Peace.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_4OfnSNEQYVdfyL1kL7T_5R7aeBkfGjA6rmtLmMxqT_2X1t-Fdzfuq9mkGUqdJ53ZLmvORPYAs_6g-GdhZOJSMib_V44K7w5osPi8zIjgYwVWDBq4cBUNrmrIacpvTeF0o7GJHpThkfg/s1600/Peace.jpg" /></a></div>Unlike Wolfe's New Sun or Soldier series, <span style="font-style: italic;">Peace</span> is a single novel that's only a shade over 260 pages. However, this 1975 novel perhaps contains within its pages even more levels of symbolism and meaning than either of those two more well-known novels. I recently re-read it for the second time and after scouring the web for other takes on it, I think it is safe to say that it is a novel that can be viewed as a lament on aging and dying, a murder mystery akin to Flann O'Brien's excellent 1967 novel <span style="font-style: italic;">The Third Policeman</span>, a look at memory palaces and how a talented author can use them to construct a vivid story, not to mention perhaps being one of the more terrifying horror novels that I have ever read. But these interpretations only scratch the surface of this remarkable novel. While Wolfe's other works almost beg for multiple re-reads so the reader can reap the maximum benefit, <span style="font-style: italic;">Peace</span> practically <span style="font-style: italic;">demands</span> it. <br />
<br />
Alden Dennis Weer on the surface appears to be a somewhat embittered old man struggling through the last days of his life. Suffering from a stroke, Weer reminisces about scenes from his childhood, all the while reflecting upon certain rooms in his old Midwestern house. Weer's stories, at first apparently devoid of fantastical or symbolic elements, comprise the majority of this story. As Weer shuffles his stoke-damaged body throughout the house, he remembers various scenes from his life. In the next few paragraphs, I shall highlight some of these scenes and how they stood out, not to mention that I shall hazard a few guesses as to their purpose and intent.<br />
<br />
In these first passages that I quote (from pages 52-55), we see Weer as a young boy, morbidly fascinated with the idea of dead bodies and disinterment, but pay close attention to the tone in which these words are delivered:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">"Aunt Olivia, if Ming-Sno dies, or Sun-sun, can we bury them here?"<br />
<br />
"What a thing to say, Den. They're not going to die."<br />
<br />
"When they get real old." Actually I would gladly have killed them on the spot for the fun of the funeral. Sun-sun, who had been sniffing at a woodchuck hole, had dirt of his nose already.<br />
<br />
"Why do you want them to be buried here?"<br />
<br />
"So somebody a long time from now will find their heads and be surprised."</span></blockquote>Here we get the first talk about disinterment and the finding of the dead. This discussion shall be seen in a refracted form later in the novel. In the next part of this scene, we see a possible connection between young Alden (Den) Weer and the mythic but terrifying dragon, again something that is hinted at elsewhere in the novel in other forms:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">A moment later we were at the top; while the professor and I sat down to rest, my aunt, facing into the wind, took off her wide hat and loosed the jet-headed pins that held her hair. It was very long, and as black as a starling's wing. Professor Peacock took a pair of binoculars from a leather case on his belt and said, "Do you know how to use these, Alden? Just turn this knob until whatever you're looking at becomes clear. I want to show you something. Where I'm pointing."<br />
<br />
"A dragon," my aunt Olivia said. "The claws of a dragon, imprisoned in an antediluvian lava flow. When Robert cracks the rock, he will be free and alive again; but don't worry, Den, he is a relative of Sun-sun's."</span></blockquote>While the dragon often represents a Satanic-like figure in various religious texts, it is the entrapped claws that I believe represent something more key here - entrapment. I will discuss this later, but first, the conclusion of this scene in which the first hint of secret, well-hidden murders is revealed:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">Through smaller and more closely set tree, through blackberry brambles and thickets, the five of us passed around the shoulder of the hill; then, over grass now drying in the first summer sun, to its top. This was a higher hill than the first, though the ascent (on the side we had chosen) was easier, and I recall that when i looked from its summit toward the hill from which we had seen the cave, I was surprised at how low and easy it appeared. I asked the professor where the town lay, and he pointed out a distant scrap of road to me, and a smoke which he said came from the brick kilns; not a single house of any sort was visible from where we stood. While my aunt and I were still admiring the view, he tied a large knot - which he told me later, when I asked, was called a "monkey's fist" - in one end of his rope and wedged it between two solidly set stones. Then, with a sliding loop around his waist, he lowered himself from the edge, fending off the stones of the bluff with his legs much as though he were walking.<br />
<br />
"Well," my aunt said, standing at the edge to watch him, with the toes of her boots (this I remember vividly) extending an inch or more into space, "he's gone, Den. Shall we cut the rope?"<br />
<br />
I was not certain that she was joking, and shook my head.<br />
<br />
"Vi, what are you two chattering about up there?" The professor's voice was still loud, but somehow sounded far away.<br />
<br />
"I'm trying to persuade Den to murder you. He has a lovely scout knife - I've seen it."<br />
<br />
"And he won't do it?"<br />
<br />
"He says not."<br />
<br />
"Good for you, lad."<br />
<br />
"Well, really, Robert, why shouldn't he? There you hang like a great, ugly spider, and all he has to do is cut the rope. It would change his whole life like a religious conversion - haven't you ever read Dostoyevsky? And if he doesn't do it he'll always wonder if it wasn't partly because he was afraid."<br />
<br />
"If you do cut it, Alden, push her over afterward, won't you? No witnesses."<br />
<br />
"That's right," my aunt Olivia told me, "you could say we made a suicide pact."</span></blockquote>But there is more to this than just the presage of murders in the still of the night that go unsolved. It is the direct reference to Dostoyevsky's <span style="font-style: italic;">Crime and Punishment</span>'s Rashkolnikov that I believe holds a key to understanding one layer of the narrative, that of from what point in "life" is Alden Dennis Weer speaking? More on this later.<br />
<br />
This extended childhood memory scene does not come to a full stop, but instead branches out into other stories. One that might hold some interest for readers is that of Mrs. Lorn's resurrection egg, a finely-crafted easter egg that serves not just as an embodiment of virtues not otherwise seen in this novel, but also it could be viewed as being the counterpoint to the action transpiring in Weer's stories. It is the bidding on this egg that leads into other stories, but I thought I'd bring it up as a point to consider when trying to make up your own interpretation of this novel.<br />
<br />
One particular story that has baffled many readers is that of the pharmacist Mr. T (no, you're not the only one to think of B.A. Barracus here, I promise!) and his orange. I have come across many interpretations of this "orange" in a web search, but the one that seems to best fit my own reaction to the scene is that of transmutation. Not only is there the sense that the pharmacist might be dabbling in alchemy, but with the rather grotesque figures that he is able to produce by injecting his concoctions into things like the orange (witness the woman with hands at her shoulders), there is a biological transmutation that seems to be occurring as well. But based on the passage below, I suspect there might be a third type of transmutation going on, a change from the rather ordinary into the bizarre grotesqueness that often is a key element in ghost tales, such as the one Mr. Smart appears to be telling, with this event serving as the transition:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">"So, as I said, my room was the one at the back of the house, which was large and a nice enough room, but hadn't much in it but a high bed, a rickety chair, an old dresser, and an chromo - I think it was 'The Stag at bay' - and me. Well, I drifted off looking at that yellow moon and thinking about Mr. T's orange; and then I woke up.<br />
<br />
"The moon wasn't shining right in at the window the way it had been, but was off at a slant, so just a little spot of light hit the floor in one corner. That made the rest of the room darker than it would have been otherwise. I sat up in bed, listening and trying to look around: there was someone besides me in that room, and I was as sure of it as I'm sure I'm sitting here in Miss Olivia's parlor. I'd had a dream, if you want to call it that, and in the dream I was lying in that bed like I was, and there was a terrible face, a horrible face, just within inches of mine. I swung my legs over the edge of the bed, and as I did my hand touched a spot of damp on the sheet that I knew was none of my doing." (p. 137).<br />
</span></blockquote>But yet this dampness is not immediately explained, although one might presume by the following description of "stickiness" that it might not have been perspiration or water, but perhaps blood instead. No, instead we are launched into an explanation as to why Mr. T has been dabbling in alchemy, why we see an armless woman with hands on her shoulders, not to mention the dog boy. But yet that bit still remains in the mind, unresolved, even as the frame story shifts from that ghost tale of Mr. T's transmutations to other memories of Alden Dennis Weer regarding Mr. Smart, until we get to this scene with Dr. Black (who had been Den's childhood doctor) that closes the third chapter:<br />
<span style="font-size: x-small;"><br />
</span><blockquote style="font-family: lucida grande;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span>"Doctor, I have had a stroke."<br />
<br />
He laughs, shaking his big belly, and smooths his vest afterward. There is a gleaming brass spittoon in one corner, and he expectorates into it, still smiling.<br />
<br />
"Doctor, I am quite serious. Please, can I talk to you for a moment?"<br />
<br />
"If it doesn't hurt your sore throat."<br />
<br />
"My throat isn't sore. Doctor, have you studied metaphysics?"<br />
<br />
"It isn't my field," Dr. Black says, "I know more about physic." But his eyes have opened a little wider - he did not think a boy of four would know the word.<br />
<br />
"Matter and energy cannot be destroyed, Doctor. Only transformed into one another. Thus whatever exists can be transformed but not destroyed; but existence is not limited to bits of metal and rays of light - vistas and personalities and even memories all exist. I am an elderly man now, Doctor, and there is no one to advise me. I have cast myself back because I need you. I have had a stroke."<br />
<br />
"I see." He smiles at me. "You are how old?"<br />
<br />
"Sixty or more. I'm not sure."<br />
<br />
"I see. You lost count?"<br />
<br />
"Everyone died. There is no one to give birthday parties; no one cares. For a time I tried to forget."<br />
<br />
"Sixty years into the future. I suppose I'll be dead by then."<br />
<br />
"You have been dead a long, long time. Even while Dale Everitton and Charlie Scudder and Miss Birkhead and Ted Siniger and Sherry Gold were still living, you were almost forgotten. I think your grave is in the old buring ground, between the park and the Presbyterian church."<br />
<br />
"What about Bobby? You know Bobby, Den, you play with him sometimes. Will he become a doctor, eh? Follow the family profession? Or a lawyer like his granddad?"<br />
<br />
"He will die in a few years. You outlived him many years, but you had no more children."<br />
<br />
"I see. Open your mouth, Den."<br />
<br />
"You don't believe me."<br />
<br />
"I think I do, but my business now is with your throat."<br />
<br />
"I can tell you more. I can tell - "<br />
<br />
"There." He wedges a big forefinger between my molars. "Don't bite or I'll slap you. I'm going to paint that throat with iodine." (pp. 164-165).</span></span></blockquote>This scene can be taken one of two ways. One, since Weer reveals that he has had a stroke, we might be seeing a person (or perhaps that person's <span style="font-style: italic;">anima</span>, or soul/spirit) who is reliving moments from his life almost involuntarily in an almost dream-like setting, with the rooms of his house serving as symbols for these scenes. Or conversely, we could be reading a ghost's account of his former life, considering that supposedly ghosts dwell most upon the traumas and key points of their lives to the exclusion of other events. While I can see why many would believe the former, I have come to the conclusion that the narrator Weer has already died. Below is one such bit of evidence that I offer up in support of this belief. Weer is chatting with a librarian with the topic dealing with the attrition of his family over time, before this intriguing bit is said:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">"Various things. Let's just say that I'm conscious from time to time that my skull is being turned up by an archaeologist's spade."<br />
<br />
"You shouldn't feel dead before you are, Mr. Weer."<br />
<br />
"That's the only time you can feel it. You're like the people who tell me I talk too much - but we're all going to be quiet such a long time."(p. 177).<br />
</span></blockquote>It is not so much a vapid conversation (which it could be, taken by itself), but that this theme of disinterment mentioned earlier reappears here as a little hint. Conversely, just before this scene occurs, there is a brief allusion of sorts to the image of Mr. T's orange:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">What was her name? I can't remember it, I who pride myself upon remembering everything. And of course there will be no coffee. The drawers of this desk are nearly empty, but not completely so. A few stale cigarettes, a picture of a girl caracoling a clockwork elephant before the eighteen-foot-high orange in front of this building, the orange that shines like a sun by night. In a moment I will leave this place and find my way back to the room with the fire, where my bed is, and my cruiser ax leaning against the wall. (p. 174).</span></blockquote><br />
There are at least three things going on in this brief passage. First, it is but one of many asides, a reference not to a past event alone, but also to Weer's "present," such as it might be. Second, the orange reappears, perhaps to stand for yet some other transmutation, perhaps not. Finally, there is this mention of a "cruiser ax." If you pay close attention to the narrative, there are many allusions to all sorts of weapons, from axes to swords. I suppose some might argue that these are just hints that Weer might be a bit violent, considering the numerous deaths that occur around him, but which are never followed to their conclusion. I suspect that might be the case, but I am not completely convinced of that, although it certainly is plausible.<br />
<br />
I spoke earlier about the possibility that Weer is dead and is living in a sort of hell. Part of what led me to consider this hypothesis is found in a book Weer finds that Mr. Gold possesses:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: times new roman;"><span style="font-size: 85%;">When he [Gold] was out of sight, I walked to the back of the store where his office was. There were several books on his table, and I picked one up. It was Morryster's <span style="font-style: italic;">Marvells of Science</span> and, opening it somewhere near the middle, I learned that though it was a mortal sin to do so, the man who wished might, if he knew the procedure, summon devils or angels, "and this not by fayth, for he that doth as he is instructed shall gayn his end, whether he believeth or no." And that angels are not, as commonly pictured, men and women whose shoulder blades sprout wings, but rather winged beings with the faces of children; and that their hands grow from their wings, and in such a way that when their wings are folded their hands are joined in prayer. That Heaven is (by the report of the summoned angels) a land of hills and terraced gardens, with cold, blue freshwater seas; that it is shaped like an angel - or, rather, like many for (like Hell) it repeats itself over and over again, always different and yet always the same, for each angel Heaven is Perfect, as each is Unique; and that the various angel Heavens touch one another at the feet and wingtips, and so permit the angels to pass from one to another.</span></blockquote><span style="font-family: times new roman; font-size: 85%;"><blockquote>And again that Hell is a country of marshes, cindery plains, burned cities, diseased brothels, tangled forests, and bestial dens; and that no two devils are of the same shape and appearance, some having limbs too many, some limbs too few, others with limbs misplaced or with the heads of animals, or having no faces, or faces like those long dead, or the faces of those whom that hate so that when they see themselves reflected they detest the image. But that all of them believe themselves handsome and, at least compared to others, good. And that murderers and their victims, if they were both evil, become at death one devil. (pp. 211-212).</blockquote></span>Not only is there a sense of the grotesque in Weer's depictions of his childhood (see the earlier passages about burying the Pekingese dogs and, of course, Mr. T's strange orange), but again there is that passing reference to the merger of murderers and evil victims into a single devil in Hell. While there certainly are other, more mundane explanations, there seems to be a circumstantial body of evidence mounting in this novel for the argument that Weer is trapped in some sort of a personal Hell, reliving his past in flashes before certain decisions are made. But it is in the final pages of the novel, where the <span style="font-style: italic;">sidhe</span> are referenced in relation to long-lost geese, that we get the final clue: Weer's aunt Olivia's voice comes to him from the intercom, asking "Den, darling, are you awake in there?" <br />
<br />
Perhaps this story is but like a dream of pastiches finally coming to a close. If so, it certainly would be more of a nightmare. But I suspect what we are seeing is the residual memories of a ghost haunted by its own past, realizing in its remembrances of former events that it is guilty of some terrible wrongs. While these wrongs are only hinted that (there are certain unexplained deaths that otherwise would have to be due to Weer's actions), I cannot help but to conclude that like O'Brien's narrator in <span style="font-style: italic;">The Third Policeman</span>, Weer has been condemned to relive his past misdeeds. If so, then <span style="font-style: italic;">Peace</span> is a very ironic title for this complex, nuanced novel. Peace is the furtherest thing from the events in Alden Dennis Weer's narrated life. Truly worthy of the epithet of "Masterwork."</div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-84035309672474638672011-03-27T19:54:00.000-05:002011-03-27T19:54:00.222-05:00SF Masterworks #42: Ward Moore, Bring the Jubilee<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOUBNIAh5oN-morUEgvVkWrF4BbeLR3IRrAonmzVB2zmhAd3BT-HJP5Nk6MFlUmXi-1rHO7LvWP3KyA6PukjRyEogmxeH6t3gxsj4LGaDQYct9f91qZqtOsc9U4NahO06y8iXE9ZrU8Ow/s1600/Bring+the+Jubilee.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjOUBNIAh5oN-morUEgvVkWrF4BbeLR3IRrAonmzVB2zmhAd3BT-HJP5Nk6MFlUmXi-1rHO7LvWP3KyA6PukjRyEogmxeH6t3gxsj4LGaDQYct9f91qZqtOsc9U4NahO06y8iXE9ZrU8Ow/s1600/Bring+the+Jubilee.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">I was born, as I say, in 1921, but it was not until the early 1930s, when I was about ten, that I bean to understand what a peculiarly frustrated and disinherited world was about me. Perhaps my approach to realization was through the crayon portrait of Granpa Hodgins which hung, very solemnly, over the mantel.<br />
<br />
Granpa Hodgins, after whom I was named, perhaps a little grandiloquently, Hodgins McCormick Backmaker, had been a veteran of the War of Southron Independence. Like so many young men he had put on a shapeless blue uniform in response to the call of the ill-advised and headstrong - or martyred - Mr. Lincoln. Depending on which of my lives' viewpoints you take.<br />
<br />
Granpa lost an arm on the Great Retreat to Philadelphia after the fall of Washington to General Lee's victorious Army of Northern Virginia, so his war ended some six months before the capitulation at Reading and the acknowledgment of the independence of the Confederate States on July 4, 1864. One-armed and embittered, Granpa came home to Wappinger Falls and, like his fellow veterans, tried to remake his life in a different and increasingly hopeless world. (p. 1)</blockquote><br />
With the possible exception of World War II, the largest number of alt-histories centered around the events and personages of the American Civil War. What if Lincoln had not been as "headstrong," as many of his detractors had noted? What if Maryland and Missouri had voted to secede in 1861, cutting off Washington, D.C. and most of the Mississippi River from Union control at the war's outset? What if Buell had not arrived in time at Pittsburg Landing? What if "Stonewall" Jackson had not been shot? What if Lee's general orders had not been rolled up in tobacco and dropped, only to be discovered by Union forces before Antietam? What if the Confederate forces had occupied the Round Tops at the onset of the crucial Battle of Gettysburg?<br />
<br />
These are the sorts of questions that have haunted historians as well as citizens on both sides of the conflict. Although, as I said in my earlier review of Keith Roberts' <a href="http://ofblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/keith-roberts-pavane.html"><i>Pavane</i></a>, I have a professional wariness of alt-histories, sometimes these works, if they revolve around more than just a single person or event, can add something to our understanding of the historical event or era in question. Ward Moore's 1953 novel, <i>Bring the Jubilee</i>, deserves to be placed in this categorization of rewarding alt-histories. Its combination of events, trends, and awareness of social dynamics raises it above the level of a mere "what if?" hypothesis, as there are some disturbing elements explored in this work that certainly apply to American society of Ward's time and perhaps for our own as well.<br />
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<i>Bring the Jubilee</i> is written in a first-person, pseudo-autobiographical format. The narrator, the young Hodgins M. Backmaker, born in 1921, narrates life in the defeated Union almost a century after its defeat at the hands of the Confederacy. As a native Southerner who grew up hearing tales of the "Lost Cause," Moore's transference of the mixture of guilt, anger, and emotional depression from the gutted South to an imagined defeated North rings true. From the KKK analogue, the Grand Army, to the widespread, deep economic recession that wipes out all of the early proto-industrial developments in the North during the antebellum period, the Civil War, now known as the War of Southron Independence rather than the War of Failed Southern Independence, has come to hold the same level of bitter significance for the Yankees as the Civil War has had in the South in reality.<br />
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Moore also does a very good job extrapolating from the conditions he alters. From the horrid treatment of African Americans in the Union (comparisons are made in a few places in the text to the Jewish Pogroms of the early 20th century) to the anti-immigration initiatives to the Confederate conquest of Mexico in the late 1860s, these events feel all the more "real" because of how well Moore hints at the root social causes: scapegoats for the defeat, the need to appease the stronger powers around the shrunken Union, to the desire of the Confederacy to expand in order to preserve its polity and power. <br />
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As strong as Moore's social historical extrapolations might be, some readers may find his narrator to be almost too invisible in the background. Backmaker, as a historian, serves the narrative point of detailing the alt-history that has unfolded. He is a witness, not an active participant, for most of the novel. This narrative "invisibility," while it serves to accentuate Moore's imagining of how events could have unfolded differently, does make it more difficult later on in the novel when Backmaker becomes involved in a physics experiment in the 1950s that ends up with him playing a much more decisive role in the "Jubilee" than what had transpired for the first 80% or so of the novel. This shift in the narrator's importance to the overall story was a bit abrupt, but yet it does circle back to a part of the introductory chapter that I chose not to quote.<br />
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<i>Bring the Jubilee</i>'s strengths far outweigh its negatives. Far from being a simple "what if?" alt-history, it is a well-considered, well-constructed argument for how social attitudes could change in the light of military defeat. His defeated United States feels very plausible and the related world events around this time fit comfortably with Moore's takes on people, their fears, their desires not to rock the socio-political boat, and so forth. Although the final two chapters may feel awkward in comparison to the first, <i>Bring the Jubilee</i> certainly is one of the finest alt-histories that I have read, one that is well suited to the "masterworks" label attached to its Gollancz edition. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-50681422733994836102011-03-27T19:52:00.000-05:002011-03-27T19:52:16.128-05:00SF Masterworks #35: Keith Roberts, Pavane<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMeaMyjnh1bGrtRmkNneZ9T4kW93sp_inav2Q0LKHkaEzKnFNWJtzr5maFXRexCuXqhX7qikNEI0WKgzibmIZyEvO-p8y1c_UCyplBx6OhsLQNGGoLGWcRWHFFI6BOCwAwk_DjTuEaVQg/s1600/Pavane.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhMeaMyjnh1bGrtRmkNneZ9T4kW93sp_inav2Q0LKHkaEzKnFNWJtzr5maFXRexCuXqhX7qikNEI0WKgzibmIZyEvO-p8y1c_UCyplBx6OhsLQNGGoLGWcRWHFFI6BOCwAwk_DjTuEaVQg/s1600/Pavane.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">On a warm July evening of the year 1588, in the royal palace of Greenwich, London, a woman lay dying, an assassin's bullets lodged in abdomen and chest. Her face was lined, her teeth blackened, and death lent her no dignity; but her last breath started echoes that ran out to shake a hemisphere. For the Faery Queen, Elizabeth the First, paramount ruler of England, was no more...<br />
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The rage of the English knew no bounds. A word, a whisper was enough; a half-wit youth, torn by the mob, calling on the blessing of the Pope...The English Catholics, bled white by fines, still mourning the Queen of the Scots, still remembering the gory Rising of the North, were faced with fresh pogroms. Unwillingly, in self-defence, they took up arms against their countrymen as the flame lit by the Walsingham massacres ran across the land, mingling with the light of warning beacons the sullen glare of the <i>auto-da-fé</i>. (p. vii)</blockquote><br />
As a historian, particularly one who concentrated on cultural and religious history, I am very wary of any work of alt-history that introduces radical changes from a simple "what if?" scenario. It is not because I think such speculations are fruitless. After all, not much would be accomplished in historical studies if such questions were not asked daily of almost everything. Rather, it is the sense that for many, perhaps for the authors as much as the readers of such alt-histories, there is a distortion that occurs whenever a focus is shifted to a singular person or event. Unfortunately for me, Larry as Reader, whenever I have to confront these questions of possible historical distortion in a story, Larry as Historian intrudes upon the Reader/Text/Author interpretation triangle, muddying the waters of story analysis.<br />
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This certainly was the case with my recent reading of Keith Roberts' 1968 novel, <i>Pavane</i>. Roberts certainly crafted a stirring beginning, as indicated by the first two paragraphs of his two-page prologue that introduces the vastly-altered 20th century setting. The year 1588 certainly was a momentous occasion, as some date from it England's rise to international prominence, a position it maintained until the end of World War II. There certainly were precarious conditions within the country, as Roberts does note, as well as conflicts with Spain and to a lesser extent, France. But there are a host of other issues, ranging from social divisions that ran deeper than the newly-formed religious factions to the already well-developed sense of English nationalism, that make it difficult for this reader at least to accept that there was a blithe acceptance of the posited Armada conquest and the full and total restoration of the Catholic Church in England.<br />
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Sometimes reviewing a work means that the reviewer has to review his or her own biases and attempt to quell them, if they cannot be suspended for the duration of this piece. For the most part, once I accepted that there was going to be a dissonance between my understanding of history and what Roberts uses as a catalyst for his story, I was resigned to the fact that I would be battling myself in an attempt to enjoy this story and to appreciate what Roberts does accomplish with his six interconnected stories and a brief coda. Despite my misgivings about the rationale behind such an alt-history and despite my puzzlement over some of the implications of the imagined alt-choices that Roberts highlights, there are things of value within this story.<br />
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Most of the action of these stories takes place in the early to mid-20th century. The Catholic restoration has been in place for nearly four hundred years, not just in England, but also in the formerly Protestant German states. Technological advancements have mostly been halted, although there are some curious analogues to the Industrial Revolution. The guild system is still largely intact and the populace has been redivided into ethno-linguistic lines (a restored Norman French, Middle English (!), Modern English, Welsh, Scots, Scottish Gaelic, and Latin are now the languages of Court and People). There is steam transport, but the use and power of it is heavily regulated. Learning is concentrated in the hands of the few, and the Papacy has as much influence as in the days of Innocent III. It is an alien world to us, one that frankly seems unrealistic considering the developments in Catholic countries during the 15th-18th centuries (not to mention that of the Protestant-controlled regions during the same time), but the key to these stories is not to focus so much on the backdrop, but instead on the characters' interactions with this alt-environment.<br />
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Roberts' characters shine in the stories contained within this narrative collection. With very few characters appearing in more than one story, each of the characters that do appear in these stories typically find themselves confronting the world around them, questioning the order of things and in some cases, wondering about these apparently mystical "old ones" that appear on occasion, hinting at a different reality. Roberts doesn't rush the telling of these stories; he allows the characters to "breathe" and to express their hopes and fears in such a fashion that the reader becomes more drawn to unraveling those little connections between the stories. The prose is very well-constructed, as few words are wasted and everything builds up to a strong conclusion in the Coda. If the reader can accept the plausibility of the narrative overarching the individual tales presented within it, <i>Pavane</i> can feel just like the slow, intricately-constructed dance after which the book is named.<br />
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But that is the key issue here. Can the reader suspend his or her disbelief enough to enjoy the rich tapestry of stories? For myself, I struggled throughout. I did appreciate how well Roberts constructed his stories; I just could not accept the premise. Even with the revelations at the end that overturned some of the conceits found within the linked stories, I found myself thinking far too often "this just is not plausible enough!" for me to gain full enjoyment out of it. However, this is a highly individualized reaction and I could see for those readers who want well-constructed stories with interesting characters and prose that makes their concerns feel vivid and "alive" where <i>Pavane</i> would be just the sort of story for them. Recognizing that a work may be a "masterwork" does not mean that one has to "like" it, of course. For me, <i>Pavane</i> was a book whose merits were partially obscured by my own biases and skepticism about the premise behind the stories contained within it. Those biases and skepticism were never fully overcome, thus lessening my enjoyment, if not my appreciation, for this work. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-72042304631946235792011-03-27T02:14:00.001-05:002011-03-27T02:18:11.996-05:00SF Masterworks #66: Lucius Shepard, Life During Wartime<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoVJ_SHhCOKV2axKnk2KbPh39csEBJgBL_P3QjG7gJd99chppzm-eKOyMn5dO2RsKy48ZlVK6kzE5MIUIKvxEpRneICKKOoHekDklF4ZQuZSTgs9IJkgPYMd7ZeXG20IfEQkfeQDbqWqA/s1600/Life+During+Wartime.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoVJ_SHhCOKV2axKnk2KbPh39csEBJgBL_P3QjG7gJd99chppzm-eKOyMn5dO2RsKy48ZlVK6kzE5MIUIKvxEpRneICKKOoHekDklF4ZQuZSTgs9IJkgPYMd7ZeXG20IfEQkfeQDbqWqA/s1600/Life+During+Wartime.jpg" /></a></div><blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">One of the new Sikorsky gunships, an element of the First Air Cavalry with the words <i>Whispering Death</i> painted on its side, gave Mingolla and Gilbey and Baylor a lift from the Ant Farm to San Francisco de Juticlan, a small town located inside the green zone, which on the latest maps was designated Free Occupied Guatemala. To the east of this green zone lay an undesignated band of yellow that crossed the country from the Mexican border to the Caribbean. The Ant Farm was a firebase on the eastern edge of the yellow band, and it was from there that Mingolla - an artillery specialist not yet twenty-one years old - lobbed shells into an area that the maps depicted in black-and-white terrain markings. And thus it was that he often thought of himself as engaged in a struggle to keep the world safe for primary colors.<br />
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Mingolla and his buddies could have taken their R and R in Rio or Caracas, but they had noticed that the men who visited these cities had a tendency to grow careless upon their return; they understood from this that the more exuberant your R and R, the more likely you were to end up a casualty, and so they always opted for the lesser distractions of the Guatemalan towns. They were not really friends; they had little in common, and under different circumstances they might well have been enemies. But taking their R and R together had come to be a ritual of survival, and once they had reached the town of their choice, they would go their separate ways and perform further rituals. Because the three had survived so much already, they believed that if they continued to perform these same rituals they would complete heir tours unscathed. They had never acknowledged their belief to one another, speaking of it only obliquely - that, too, was part of the ritual - and had this belief been challenged they would have admitted its irrationality; yet they would also have pointed out that the strange character of the war acted to enforce it. (pp. 1-2)</blockquote><br />
The 1980s were a strange time for the American people. The country was still smarting over its failures in Vietnam and views of war and its purposes were perhaps the bleakest ever in American history. Several movies about the Vietnam experience and its effects on the soldiers were made, ranging from anti-war movies such as the Ron Kovacs' autobiographical story, <i>Born on the Fourth of July</i>, to the <i>Rambo </i>movies to the <i>Missing in Action</i> movie series. There were also TV shows such as <i>The A-Team</i> that referenced the war and the indignities that the returning soldiers experienced obliquely. During this time, the American government continued to be engaged in covert operations in Central and South America to prop up anti-Communist forces in Chile, Colombia, Nicaragua, and perhaps most tragically, in El Salvador, which suffered from a thirteen year civil war from 1979 to 1992. Several novels, realist and alt-historical alike, were written about these conflicts and the psychological traumas that they inflicted upon soldiers and civilians alike. One of the strongest portrayals of this period and its mindset is Lucius Shepard's 1987 classic, <i>Life During Wartime</i>, which combines the psychological elements of <i>Apocalypse Now</i> with a close look at the small-scale wars in Latin America that perhaps can be viewed as the forerunners for today's conflicts.<br />
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Above is a quote taken from the book's introduction. Shepard immediately removes the reader from his or her comfortable setting and places them in the midst of a conflict that has already embittered and stressed the combatants. Notice how there are only last names given; no first names nor ranks. There is a sense of superstitious cynicism about Mingolla and his two companions. They are together only because they are forced together, and yet that force is not anything formal or commanded, but is an ad hoc reaction to what they have witnessed. Already there are nicknames for locales - the Ant Farm could as well be Hamburger hill - and there is a tension present, as if at any moment the soldiers might snap. Shepard sets the stage here for an insightful look at brutality, but he takes it further than what a contemporary war novelist might have written.<br />
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Mingolla, whose pre-war life is barely touched upon (he was a high school athlete who entered the military after graduating from high school) except to provide contrasts for his future development, is soon tested for an experimental new army group, the PsiCorps, a group of soldiers who, with the right drugs and training, are able to use their minds to influence thoughts and actions of those who are not gifted with this ability. As seen in one early scene, this power disconcerts him:<br />
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<blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">The Cuban eased toward Mingolla's door, his progress tangible, like a burning match moving behind a sheet of paper. Mingolla's calm was shattered. The man's heat, his fleshy temperature, was what disturbed him. He had imagined himself killing with a cinematic swiftness and lack of mess; now he thought of hogs being butchered and pile drivers smashing the skulls of cows. And could he trust this freakish form of perception? What if he couldn't? What if he stabbed too late? Too soon? Then the hot, alive thing was almost at the door, and having no choice, Mingolla timed his attack to its movement,s stabbing just as the Cuban entered.<br />
<br />
He executed perfectly. (p. 52)</blockquote><br />
Shepard's use of limited third-person perspective to show just what was happening to Mingolla during his development is superb. Mingolla's thoughts, his reactions, all of this feels "natural" and not too rushed or too explicit. Shepard integrates well the psychic training that Mingolla has received with the harsh brutality of the Guatemalan jungle warfare that is occurring between the American-led forces and the Cuban/Communist opponents. But before the reader begins to think that this will settle into a sort of psychic/psychological game of cat-and-mouse, Shepard introduces a wild card: the mysterious woman named Deborah, who may be a spy for the Sombra group, the counterparts to PsiCorps. Shepard easily could have made Deborah into a sort of Bond seductress, but in one key scene about halfway into the novel, he shows the other side of the conflicts that Mingolla and others have been experiencing during the jungle campaign, one that is at least as brutal as anything the soldiers have undergone:<br />
<blockquote><br />
<div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Maybe I should tell," she said. "Maybe it'll explain why I was so reticent with you at first."</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Back in Emerald?"</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
"Yes...you see there were a lot of reasons I didn't want to get involved with you like this, and one was I was afraid it wouldn't be any good between us."</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"You mean sex?"</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">She nodded. "It hadn't ever been good for me, and I thought nothing could change that, not even being in love. But it is good, and I keep getting scared it won't last."</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Why?"</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Because it's so perfect...the way you fit me, how you touch me. And everything before was so imperfect." She turned away as if embarrassed. "When they brought us in for interrogation...the government..."</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Your family?"</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><br />
</div><div style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"Yes. She let out a sigh. "Why they brought us in, I knew they'd rape me. That's what they always do. I prepared for it, and every day that passed, every day it didn't happen. I grew more afraid. I thought they must be saving me for something special, some special horror." (p. 266)</div></blockquote>Rather than just simply continued, tortuous rape, the Communist regime has something even more nefarious in mind with this delay and the subsequent raising of hope:<br />
<br />
<blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">"I was beginning to think the major just wanted me to sit there and look nice. Then about two o'clock he came to his door and said, 'Debora, I need you now.' Just the way he'd ask a secretary in to take dictation, just that offhanded tone. I went into the office, and he told me to take off my underwear. Still very polite. Smiling. I was afraid, but like I said, I'd prepared for this, and so I did what he asked. He told me to get down on my hands and knees beside the desk. I did that, too. I shed a few tears, i remember, but I managed to stop them. He pulled out a tube from his drawer, some kind of jelly, and...and he lubricated me. That was almost the worst part. And then he dropped his trousers and came inside me from behind, the way you..."<br />
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"I'm sorry;" said Mingola. "I didn't..."<br />
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"No, no!" Debora's hands fluttered in the dark, found his face, cupped it. "Sometimes I wanted you to do that, but..." She sighed again. (p. 267)</blockquote><br />
Shepard manages to navigate between the treacheries of being too casual with such a scene and overplaying the brutality of the repeated rapes Debora had to endure before she would accept her training as a psychic agent. Debora's inhumane treatment, underscored by the sheer callousness of the major's hum-drum approach to degrading her by utilizing sex as just another manipulative tool, contrasts nicely with the character development of Mingolla and certain other characters in the first half or so of the novel. These vivid scenes serve not just to develop the mood, but to further the plot, until the narrative tensions builds to a crescendo that comes crashing down in a finale that lives up to the promise of the slow psychological buildup.<br />
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<i>Life During Wartime</i> is one of the best psychological SF stories that I have read. Shepard's prose is outstanding through. His characters feel "real" and their traumas, subtle and obvious alike, are woven into a taut plot that furthers its thematic exploration of war and the traumas inflicted by it. There are very few weak points to discuss, if any. Perhaps a character's arc could have been furthered a slight bit further, but it would be at best quibbling over what really is an outstanding work of fiction. Highly recommended. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7187641567461387320.post-70096454922697992722011-03-27T02:11:00.001-05:002011-03-27T02:16:29.780-05:00SF Masterworks #21: Olaf Stapledon, Star Maker<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on"><blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;"><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjd0dQsH2GEWiU7mXjYVeGB2nIBrkAi1q4eIfK032BjHAJNnYYOHUjvFEe_x9Y0MLIVnxcttTamRi1U1UCE0tV4kT7CJqn-8N4ZyzbqQ-dky9fTBFFiVqGzbwnjtrr3URESxIQcmt8bPQ4/s1600/Star+Maker.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjd0dQsH2GEWiU7mXjYVeGB2nIBrkAi1q4eIfK032BjHAJNnYYOHUjvFEe_x9Y0MLIVnxcttTamRi1U1UCE0tV4kT7CJqn-8N4ZyzbqQ-dky9fTBFFiVqGzbwnjtrr3URESxIQcmt8bPQ4/s1600/Star+Maker.jpg" /></a></div>In a study of Poe's <i>Eureka</i>, Valéry has observed that cosmogony is the most ancient of the literary genres; despite the anticipations of Bacon, whose <i>New Atlantis</i> was published at the beginning of the seventeenth century, it is possible to confirm that the most modern is the fable or fantasy of scientific character. It is known that Poe approached the two genres separately and perhaps invented the last one; Olaf Stapledon combined the two in this singular book. For this imaginary exploration of time and space, he did not resort to vague troublesome mechanisms, but instead to the fusion of a human mind with others, to a kind of lucid ecstasy or (if one wants) a variation of a certain famous Cabalistic doctrine, which supposes that in the body of a man can inhabit many souls, as in the body of a woman about to be a mother. The majority of Stapledon's colleagues seem arbitrary or irresponsible; this work, in exchange, leaves the impression of sincerity, despite the singular and at times monstrous nature of his stories. He doesn't accumulate inventions for the distraction or stultification of those who will read him; it follows and it registers with honest rigor the complex and shady vicissitudes of a coherent dream. (Jorge Luis Borges, <i>Prólogos con un prólogo de prólogos</i>, p. 232)</blockquote><br />
Borges' commentary on Olaf Stapledon's 1937 novel, <i>Star Maker</i>, serves as a perfect introduction to this work that builds upon and expands the scope found in his earlier 1930 novel, <a href="http://ofblog.blogspot.com/2010/09/olaf-stapledon-last-and-first-men.html"><i>Last and First Men</i></a>. In my review of that earlier book, I focused on the cyclical nature of the narrative as two billion imagined years of future human existence were outlined. Here in <i>Star Maker</i>, Stapledon expands that narrative in two ways. The first is simply a matter of magnitude, instead of a measly two billion years, he charts a course through innumerable epochs of stars, galaxies, and the life that sometimes sprung up out of dead stellar material. The second is more tricky. As Borges notes in the excerpt I translated above, there is a sort of union of souls, as the human narrator at the beginning of the novel finds himself disassociated from his body, which in turn permits him to touch upon what may be the ultimate cosmic mind, the Star Maker himself.<br />
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Due to the presence of this disembodied human observer, the narrative structure for <i>Star Maker</i> oddly enough feels less "distant" than that of <i>Last and First Men</i>, despite the tens of billions more years covered in this book compared to the other. Although the narrator is mostly content to make observations about the various strange (and sometimes familiar) life forms he encounters on his psychic journey through space-time, there are times that his observations serve to create a sort of quasi-mystical connection between various lifeforms and their struggles to understand that central mystery of "what is life and why am I alive to ask this question?" Take for instance this passage about a race of plant-men:<br />
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<blockquote style="font-family: "Courier New",Courier,monospace;">It was of course through animal prowess and practical human intelligence that the species had long ago come to dominate its word. But at all times this practical will had been tempered and enriched by a kind of experience which among men is very rare. Every day, throughout the ages, these beings had surrendered their feverish animal nature not merely to unconscious or dream-racked sleep, such as animals know, but to the special kind of awareness which (we learned) belongs to plants. Spreading their leaves, they had absorbed directly the essential elixir of life which animals receive only at second hand in the mangled flesh of their prey. Thus they seemingly maintained immediate physical contact with the source of all cosmical being. And this state, though physical, was also in some sense spiritual. It had a far-reaching effect on all their conduct. If theological language were acceptable, it might well be called a spiritual contact with God. During the busy night-time they went about their affairs as insulated individuals, having no present immediate experience of their underlying unity; but normally they were always preserved from the worst excesses of individualism by memory of their day-time life. (p. 118)</blockquote><br />
Although there was some hint of this metaphysical concern in <i>Last and First Men</i>, it is here in <i>Star Maker</i> where Stapledon unfolds his narrative further to incorporate speculations on "meanings" and "purposes" for life and the cosmos. While much of Stapledon's writings show at least some influence from authors like Schopenhauer and Spengler, the structure of Stapledon's narrative here (as it was to a lesser extent in <i>Last and First Men</i>) is that of a Marxist character, especially with its focus on societal mechanisms of thesis-antithesis-synthesis. However, Stapledon added a few quasi-religious undertones to this narrative (as the above quote hints at) that likely confounded the more orthodox Marxist readers of this text. In speculating on a divine figure, Stapledon is not demonstrating any loyalty to a particular creed; if anything, his Star Maker is a troubling entity, unconcerned as it seems to be, at least at first, with the organisms, ranging from galaxies to microbes, that it creates in order to destroy, perhaps in order to learn how to perfect what it has created.<br />
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This is not a comforting element. It can be downright disturbing to imagine. Yet Stapledon manages to create a sprawling narrative around this Star Maker (as witnessed in glimpses by the disembodied narrator) that somehow manages to be less threatening than it otherwise may have been. Perhaps it is the Star Maker's quest for perfection reminds us of our own all-too-human desire to improve and expand our horizons and accomplishments that makes at least one facet of its immense personality fathomable to us. <i>Star Maker</i> is not as much a novel about the universe as it is a microcosm in print form for all of our hopes and dreams regarding where we came from and where we're heading. As such, it is a fitting sequel to <i>Last and First Men</i> and its sometimes-inconclusive responses to core human concerns makes it a "masterwork" worthy of reading by people from all walks of life even after seventy-plus years since its initial publication. </div>Larry Nolenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16001420558511460998noreply@blogger.com0