Ken
Macleod’s The Stone Canal
opens with the story of the young Jonathan Wilde and the major happenings of he
and a fair-weather friend as they grow up in near-future Scotland. Getting drunk, chasing girls, and arguing
politics, they eventually split due to personal differences as post-humanisn
spins everyone’s lives in crazy directions.
Easing back on the throttle (aiming at ‘mere’ purposeful humanism),
Macleod’s 2014 Descent uses a similar
character setup, but keeps its agenda more closely tied to the here and
now. Purported UFO sightings, government
and commercial conspiracy theories, speciation, and subjective reality abound,
the story of Ryan Sinclair successfully extends the personal struggles of Wilde
into more relatable and eerie Orwellian near future. Featuring the tightest technique of the
author’s career, some may argue it is Macleod’s best yet.
Where
Ian Watson’s Miracle Visitors plays
with the psychological, cultural, and sociological aspects of UFO visitations, Descent looks into the ____________
aspects. To fill in that blank would
spoil the story, but suffice to say Macleod uses existent concepts on the
pinboard of UFO theorists to paint what he would see as the empirical reality
of the situation. From government
conspiracy to neuroscience, the underpinnings of urban myth to street drugs,
the strange objects people—some of whom consider themselves rational beings—see
in the sky are looked at in mysterious/thriller-esque style. As the front cover copy says, seeing is not
always enough to believe.