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Strong Medicine Books That Cure What Ails You | |
by John Joseph Adams |
September 2006
Paragaea by Chris Roberson
Pyr, 2006, $15.00
When Cosmonaut Leena Chirikov is launched into space on the Soviet rocket Vostok 7, it
should be the culmination of a lifelong dream. But several hours into her mission, the
ground crew at Star City lose contact with Vostok 7, and Leena finds herself somehow
transported to a strange otherworld known as Paragaea. It is, as the name implies, sort of
like Earth, albeit with some distinct differences: one, it has only a single large continent;
two, there's a race of animal-human hybrid creatures known as metamen; three, there's
wildly advanced technologies (such as androids), seemingly left over from a now-dead
civilization; and four...well, there's lots of other differences, but I think you get the idea.
Sure, it sounds like a cool place to visit, but you probably wouldn't want to live there. And
so the problem is that now that Leena's there, there doesn't seem to be any way to get back
to Earth; but being a loyal Soviet, now that she's discovered Paragaea, all she wants to do is
get back, so she can tell her superiors about this strange new land.
Luckily, soon upon her arrival, Leena meets up with a fellow displaced traveler from EarthHieronymus Bonaventure, though he, unlike she, is not from the 1960s; rather, he is from
the 18th Century, where he served as a Second Lieutenant, on the British Royal Navy's HMS
Fortitude, until his mysterious arrival in Paragaea many years earlier. Bonaventure's
companion is a Paragaean native, the an exiled prince Balam, a jaguar metaman. After
helping Leena out of a sticky situation, the twohaving not much else better to do and a
unquenchable thirst for adventuredecide to help her find out if there's any way to get back
to Earth. Their journey takes them from one end of Paragaea to the other, and the group
gets into all sorts of scrapes and encounters, and meets a wide variety of interesting and
sometimes deadly people. But Leena's return to Earth is by no means certain; Hieronymus
has been stuck on Paragaea for years, and no one knows for sure if there actually is a way
back to Earth or not. Will our intrepid heroes find the portal home, or will they be stuck on
Paragaea forever?
If that last line doesn't clue you in to the very essence of what Paragaea is all about, then
the novel's subtitle, "A Planetary Romance" (a term harkening back to the days before
science fiction was called science fiction), surely will. It's neo-pulp; that is, it's written in
the tradition of the pulp masters of the pastEdgar Rice Burroughs, H. Rider Haggard, et
al.but is written in a modern style more accessible to contemporary readers. Roberson
knows his pulp well and has fun exploring and reinventing the tropes of that era, and he
does so in a fresh, original, andmost importantlyfun way. And like Burroughs's Barsoom
stories, Roberson's Paragaea is otherworldly swashbuckling action-adventure at its finest.
One of the most effective pulpy techniques Roberson employs throughout the novel is his
use of the story-within-the-story narrative. When new characters are introduced, and when
the primary character come to discuss their pasts, Roberson shifts the narrative seamlessly
into a flashback narrative, in essence telling a short story within the overall framework of
the novel. In another writer's hands, this technique could distract from the main narrative,
but Roberson handles it perfectlyusing the stories to develop the characters and at the
same time further the primary narrative thread. And the characters do come vividly aliveHieronymus and Leena in particularleaving the reader eager to read about their other
adventures.
You like sense of wonder? This book's got sense of wonder. By the bucketful. There might
not be any Great Toonoolian Marshes on Paragaea, but there might as well be; Paragaea is
this generation's A Princess of Mars. Read it with your mind's eye wide open, so you can
take it all in.
For excerpts, a prequel novel, maps, and other supplementary material, visit Roberson's
Paragaea website.
James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon by Julie Phillips
St. Martin's Press, 2006, $27.95
Alice B. Sheldon was the real name of the acclaimed multiple award-winning SF author
James Tiptree, Jr. This book catalogues her life, from her African safari-going childhood to
her career in government intelligence, and from her eventual writing success to her
untimely and tragic death, which ended in a husband-wife murder-suicide. There's much
more to the book than all that, but based on that alone, if there ever was a SF writer who
needed a biography written about him or her, it's Tiptree.
The full story, of course, is much more complex; Sheldon's choice of a male pseudonym
went beyond simple marketing considerations (during the 60s and 70s when Tiptree got her
start publishing, it was fairly common for female writers to disguise their gender when
writing SF)Sheldon was at odds with her gender, or at least her sexuality, seemingly her
entire life. Much of her fiction dealt with this inner conflict (perhaps most famously in "The
Women Men Don't See"), and while Sheldon attempted to write about gender from a
scientific standpoint for much of her life, it was not until she assumed the identity of a mancreated the Tiptree persona and disguised her explorations as science fictionthat Sheldon
was able to truly start answering some of the questions that she had been asking her entire
life.
Phillips's depiction of Sheldon shows her as an engaging, eccentric, and, in the end,
disturbed personalityone that cannot help but fascinate. I could say that this book is a
must read for anyone interested in feminism, exploration of gender, or Tiptree's writing. I
could say that this is a book any SF reader with an interest in the history of the field would
enjoy, or I could say the same of readers interested in reading about people who lived
amazing lives. But it is better to simply say this book is a must read; no qualifiers are
needed.
I think it's safe to say you can pencil this in on your Hugo ballot for next year, in the "Best
Related Book" category (heck, write it in pen, and just mark it down as the winner), and you
can probably do likewise with the World Fantasy Award "Special Award: Professional"category. If there were a Nebula category for non-fiction, this would be sure to win that
too. It's is so astonishingly good, it's the sort of thing that will prompt new awards to be
founded, just to honor it. But a slew of non-genre awards are sure to follow as well. Dare I
say the Pulitzer Prize? That might be taking it a bit too far, to imagine that a genre-related
book such as this could win that most coveted of literary prizes, but it deserves it; it's that
good.
For photos and excerpts, and more information about the book, visit Phillips's website. For
further reading, look for Phillips's essay, "Talking Too Much: About James Tiptree, Jr." in The
James Tiptree Award Anthology 2, and the "Dear Starbear" letters (a correspondence
between Tiptree and Ursula K. Le Guin) in the Sept. 2006 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy
& Science Fiction.
Map of Dreams by M. Rickert
Golden Gryphon, 2006, $24.95
M. Rickert is the sort of writer who upon reading her work, you just assume that she's
already lined her mantle with awards. That she hasn't yet been the recipient of any of the
genre's major awards yet only goes to show how meaningless they can be. If Rickert's work
is not what awardsespecially the World Fantasy Awardwere designed to honor, what the
heck is?
Perhaps now that her first book publication is upon us that will change; so long as I'm
making award predictions, let's just go ahead and say this one will end up on the World
Fantasy Award "Best Collection" ballot next year, and since Kelly Link is unlikely to have a
collection eligible next year, Rickert's the one to beat.
But enough about awards. Map of Dreams is a collection featuring most of Rickert's work to
dateseventeen tales plus four interstitial framing sectionsincluding a long, previously
unpublished novella which gives the collection its name.
"Map of Dreams" tells the story of Annie Merchant, a mother who loses her daughter to a
sniper's bullet, in a random act of violence. So distraught is she over her daughter's death,
she seeks out another survivor of the sniper's violence, a celebrity writer who after the
tragedy took to writing about time travel. Annie soon finds that the author was not only
writing about time travel, but actually exploring the possibilities of it, to, as she longs to,
change the events of that terrible day. The novella is a bit overlong and reads as if it were
early work of Rickert's, but it is effective at communicating the sense of helpless outrage
and anger one would feel after the loss of a child. Rickert makes Merchant's loss the
reader's loss, and in the end its power overcomes whatever shortcomings it may have.
Much of Rickert's other work also deals honestly and heart-wrenchingly with the subject of
loss, but echoing most closely the theme of "Map of Dreams" is the last (and best) story in
the book, "The Chambered Fruit," in which a young mother, Chloe, loses her daughter
Steffie to an Internet predator. Later, after the breakup of her marriage and the specter of
her daughter's death continues to haunt her, she begins receiving odd, mostly-silent phone
calls which she takes to be her daughter attempting to contact her. The story is potent and
lyrical, a study in how to take the more common tropes of fantasy and tell a story that is
entirely uncommon, both in its take on the theme and its level of literary achievement.
In between these two tales are a wide range of other tales of the fantastic including: "Leda,"
a modern-day retelling of "Leda and the Swan"; "Bread and Bombs," a post-holocaust tale;
"Cold Fires," a dark tale set on a cold, wintry night, that intertwines two narratives to form a
third; "The Harrowing," a tale of clergy gone bad and a possible explanation for the demons
in all of usall of which demonstrate the heights that fantasy can achieve when writers use
the fantastic to illuminate the essence of what in life is real by contrasting it with what is
not.
For more information about the collection, visit the publisher's website.