It would be interesting to begin this review with
the number of what-ifs Brian Aldiss based his novel Hothouse on, hyper-greenhouse effects, locked planetary rotations,
sentient flora, etc. But by doing so,
all of the hardcore science-fiction junkies would go running the other
way. “That’s not possible.”, “It could
never happen that way.”, “That’s not sci-fi.”, etc. And all of these comments would
be true; Hothouse is fantasy through
and through, and approached from any other direction will only lead to complaints
and disappointment.
Aldiss obviously relaxed and wanting to have a
little fun, Hothouse is a simplistic
yet strangely beautiful tale of a group of humans living in the super-flora
that has covered the side of the Earth facing the sun. The far-future planet no longer rotating, the
half exposed to the dying sun’s radiation has evolved significantly. Vegetation and insect life have taken on
innumerable fantastic and sentient forms in the greenhouse jungle, and humans, now
smaller and greener, have been reduced to a middling role in the food chain. The jungle canopy and Ground too dangerous,
small human tribes eke out an existence amongst the branches. Life as predator and prey not always easy, tigerflies,
trappersnappers, vegbirds, and the plethora of other fantastic creatures fill
the tale.
The setting the real main character, Aldiss allows
the reader little personal knowledge of the characters involved. Tone half-myth/half-fairy tale, focus is on the
movement of a particular tribe, including Gren, Lily-yo, and Yattmur. Tinted in the most simplistic yet human of
colors, many die easily encountering the exigencies of the hyper-jungle. As such, readers looking for empathetic
characters would do best to steer away from Hothouse. Though an adventuresome tale with a climax is
told, Aldiss never loses focus on humanity’s position in the larger scope of
life.
Like Helliconia,
Hothouse is redolent with Gaian themes. Humanity continually subject to the elements,
Aldiss never paints a pretty picture of survival in his jungled Earth. Every step presents a new danger as the winds
of fate push and pull the small tribe’s fragile existence beyond its control. Choices never easy, the conclusion of the
novel wraps up things in surprisingly affecting fashion given the light tone
that permeates the story. Real insight
into the relativity of human nature, the final page makes the book worth the
while.
A certain playfulness flitting through the story, at
times Aldiss relaxes a little too much, allowing the story to move beyond the
scope laid out at the book’s outset. The
last third in particular sees the unnecessary introduction of characters and
scenes that could have been done without and the story’s message still rung true,
not to mention been better structured regarding the overall timeline. Those looking for a dearth of the fantastic
will not be disappointed by the imaginative digression, however.
In the end, Hothouse
is an exotic adventure that, if approached any other way, cannot be
enjoyed. Any examination of the
hard-science backing the story will fall quickly apart. Somewhere between myth and fairy tale, the story
is set in a fantastical jungle that imagines the Earth taken over by
vegetation, the sun’s radiation mutating and evolving plant life into a wide
variety of forms, placid to carnivorous.
Aldiss’s imaginative scope—the land, the style of life, and the sentient
flora—will stick in the reader’s mind after the book is finished, and is in
fact the main reason to read the book. A
cross between the anthropological side of Ursula Le Guin’s fantasy and the
outright imagination of Jack Vance’s, fans of either author should enjoy
Aldiss’s light but highly creative story.
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