For those unaware, The Snow Queen is a fairy tale originally written by Hans Christian
Anderson in 1845. Possessing all the
elements that make tales fairy—innocence, love, severance, magic, and the
blackest of evil, his story was ripe for a modern revisioning a la Roger Zelazny, Donna Jo Napoli,
Jeff Vandermeer, Neil Gaiman, and a host of other writers who have used the
seeds of the past to grow stories of their own.
Not letting the opportunity slip away, Joan D. Vinge wrote The Snow Queen in 1980. Anderson’s story fully transposed into a
science fiction setting, Vinge succeeds on a number of fronts, but falls short
in others.
The basic plot structure of The Snow Queen remains true to the
original: a pair in love are separated and must escape the wiles of the Snow
Queen to find their way back together again.
Triamat, however, is a far different setting than Anderson’s. A water planet, two groups (called the
Summers and Winters) inhabit what little land exists and every 150 years
exchange power. At the start of the
novel, the transition from Winter to Summer is drawing nigh and the Snow Queen
is preparing to sacrifice herself in the traditional ceremony which marks the
handover. Secretly, however, she has
scattered clones of herself around the planet, hoping to keep her position
after the transition.
Moon is one such clone. Raised in a fishing village far from
metropolitan Carbuncle (Tiamat’s capital), she grows up strong and healthy and
spends her youth in love with her cousin, Spark. When the time comes to take the test to
determine her station in life, the pair suddenly find themselves going opposite
directions—and quickly. Spark ending up
on Carbuncle’s unforgiving streets penniless and alone, he must find ways to
fend for himself, while Moon, stranded far from Tiamat, must find a way back to
her home and love. Will the pair
reunite? Readers of the fairy tale
already know the answer, so it must be in the telling that something
interesting is featured.
Joan Vinge appears to have no shortage
of imagination. The Snow Queen possesses numerous fantasy and sci-fi ideas—some
old, some new—that are infused in a fresh setting. In fact science-fantasy, people fly in space
ships, aliens appear in society, and a magical, life-granting elixir is fought
over, traded, and ultimately killed for.
The city of Carbuncle is wonderfully realized, its coral spiral standing
aloft from the iron-dark waters coming to life in the mind’s eye. Based on the ceremonies and sense of
tradition inherent to the colorful scenes and theatrical tropes, the book is a
true meal for the senses. The masks,
they are just a beautiful touch.
Offsetting the positives of plot and
creativity are a few negatives, however.
Bogged down with internal monologue, in the hands of another writer the
story could have been presented in a style far more engaging, not to mention efficient. Page after page of narrative appears in block
paragraph form, the story jerked along by fits and starts of action scenes and
hasty bits of dialogue that only temporarily assuage the monotony between. Readers not bothered by the wandering drone
of character/author thought will find nothing wrong, while others will wish
Vinge would pull back the blanket of verbosity and liven things up with a
better balance between monologue and dialogue.
But a bigger issue in The Snow Queen is the clash of mode and
theme. With several important subjects
under discussion, among them environmentalism, cultural domination and
discrimination, the value and use of knowledge, and the role of women in power,
one would expect a narrative suitable in tone.
Vinge, however, chooses to keep things fairy tale, i.e. melodramatic,
and in turn undermines the gravity of her dialectic, not to mention the realism
of her characters. The result is scenes with
potential have their legs swept out from under them by cheesy
sentiment—Disney-style moralizing. Vinge
may remain true to the fairy tale roots of the story, but she fails to balance
her method of exposition with the weight of the themes. Read Zel
(Napoli) or The Graveyard Book
(Gaiman) and to see fairy tale better intertwined with content.
In the end, The Snow Queen is a novel that can be respected for its aims but is
best appreciated for its aesthetics. The
world, characters, and scenes lovingly described, images of fantastic delight
spring easily to mind reading the adventures of Moon and her return to
Spark. Upon deeper examination, however,
flaws appear that cast doubt upon the novel’s overall integrity, some choices
of presentation not panning out well.
In short, the novel is a fairy tale in more than origin, a disappointing
fact for its themes. Fans of Roger Zelazny may enjoy Vinge’s classically influenced science fantasy, just don’t
expect the same sharply edged style.
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