I was lucky enough to have seen Avatar in 3D at the cinema.
I say ‘lucky’ because, despite the simplicity of the storyline, the
visuals were truly a feast. There is one
particular scene wherein the main character has just been rescued by a woman and
she leads him back to her community. As
darkness settles in, the jungle comes to bright neon life—the electric blue
flowers, pink fronds, and yellow leaves literally vibrating in the air, creating
an organic, hallucinatory experience impossible for television to emulate. Relying on visual effect, Chris
Beckett’s Dark Eden (Broadway Books) possesses this same
stark contrast between darkness and color, but embeds the setting with a more intelligent
story than James Cameron’s. Throwing
down the gauntlet to society and its perspective on time, the novel is among
the top sci-fi books published in 2012 (UK) and 2014 (US).
Dark Eden is the
story of the descendants of the space ship Defiant. Like the Mayflower,
the Defiant left Earth seeking
freedom from oppression. But upon
arriving on the planet Eden, new problems arose,
forcing some of the crew to return to Earth and leave three behind to await rescue. Six generations later, the three have grown into
a small community—genetically dysfunctional, but a community nonetheless calling themselves
the Family. More than 500 people now live
in Circle Forest—a
piece of land that glows with neon life amidst the perpetual darkness of Eden. But population increase has not had a
positive effect; times are getting harder and harder. Where there were once many animals and fruits
available, provisions have become scarce as the number of mouths has multiplied
and the available resources diminished—and nobody wants to climb the dangerous ice-clad
mountains of night that surround Circle Forest to see if sustenance lies beyond. Hunting one day, John Redlantern encounters a
night leopard, and rather than climbing a tree to escape, decides to face down the
deadly creature. Living to see another
day, John goes on to challenge status quo at community council, proposing a new
group be set up in a different part of the forest. In the aftermath of the ensuing conflict, the
Family on Eden
is never the same.
It is at that point in Dark
Eden that Beckett could easily have taken the narrative down a path trod bare
by sci-fi and fantasy: the path of The
Hero with a Thousand Faces. John
Redlantern dares to defy the elders, his family, and the rules the group lives
by, forcing them to take action against him.
And it is precisely here that most other genre writers would cast John
out of the group into the wilds, where after learning numerous lessons and defeating
many enemies, he would return with wisdom and strength to lead the group
through the troubles that inevitably arose in his absence, and guide them to a better
quality of life—happily ever after.
Beckett tosses this idea over his shoulder and writes his own story. Events escalating simplistically but
realistically, the juxtaposition of the climax is original in fiction but
unfortunately all too common in reality.
Falling wholly on the Brian Aldiss and Ursula Le Guin side
of the science fiction/fantasy fence rather than the Robert E. Howard or Richard Morgan
side, Dark Eden is about looking to
the future, the casting aside of ideas which prevent the progression of society,
and the need for group understanding if humanity’s issues are to be resolved,
that is, instead of confronting the world’s problems with single-handed aggression
and violence (man vs. the world! Huw-wah!) or giving in to the idea that the
only way to survive is look out for number one.
In other words, the novel is not about a muscular hero getting girls and
treasure and setting the world aright with the power of his sword, rather an
examination of society, the elimination of beliefs which have served
their purpose but are no longer valid, and an altering of perspective to look ahead,
instead of behind or at one’s own navel.
Accordingly, there are a few relevant interpretations of Dark Eden. With the story set up as it is, and the
conclusion arriving where it does, the novel is both commentary on and a
challenge to any aspect of society which holds status as ‘unquestionable’. Be it economic paradigms, religions,
political systems, social programs, cultural habits, or just how you brush your
teeth everyday, Beckett confronts the reader with elements of life and society
and forces them to ask whether these elements are in practice for long-term
benefit, or just because grandpa did it that way. It is a
re-contextualization. Rather than
looking backward and clinging to the knowledge of the past, he asks that we
reevaluate which aspects progress society positively, and to abandon those
which do not. Perhaps most importantly,
he also asks the reader to think upon what new paradigms might be put in place
to balance the damage done.
Given the reference in the title, the Cain and Abel sub-story,
the content of conversation and group rituals, and the unconditional waiting
for rescue, the strongest parallel of Dark
Eden is Western religion. The
Jewish, Christian, and Muslim faiths all originate in a utopian story, ritualize
their histories, and believe someday Yahweh/God/Allah will return to take his
(not ‘her’, hmm?) followers to heaven.
And after more than a millennium, still they await the great
return. The Family of Dark Eden has likewise been waiting, and
for those 150 years has evolved little—the strongest, most propagated belief
among them being that the Defiant will
any day return and rescue them so they should stay put and not attempt anything
radical. They pass along legends about the
original three inhabitants and participate in theater, complete with props and scripts
that depict stories from when the Defiant
first arrived on Eden. They do this despite the fact that the
circumstances of the Family’s existence have changed drastically,
namely population increase, food scarcity, and environmental degradation. Western religions evolving at an
exponentially slower rate than society, our world too has become a vastly different
place from that which is described in the Torah/Bible/Koran. Yet there remain believers who cling to the stories
in hope of the great return, and in effect distance themselves from the realities
of modern life. Beckett does not delve
into spiritual aspects (i.e. the idea of, or belief in a god), he instead critiques
Western religion for the manner in which it is applied, the main thrust being
the stilting of societal progress which ensues.
For example, at many locations in the world, the practice of Islam
prevents women from having key civil rights.
It has so for centuries, just as the unconditional belief the Defiant will return puts blinders on the
Family’s worldview to the effect they have remained primitive in behavior and
technology for more than a century to the detriment of many.
And Becket tackles gender, too. John Redlantern is not the Golden Age male hero
with brains and brawn. His wits do not
extricate him from every scrape, nor does his strength prevent him from getting
hurt—emotionally and physically. Though
possessing a stronger sense of leadership than others, he and several other men
in the story remain aggressive, power hungry males—something offset by the
inclusion of Tina Spiketree, Jeff Redlantern, the oldmums, and other key characters
with more than simple vengeance and power on their minds. Continuing to subvert the hero myth, what
John, Tina, Jeff, and the others accomplish is done as a male/female team that
is not dependent on one person to do all the work, in turn validating the idea of a
synthesized society.
But for as strong as Dark
Eden is from a cultural, behavioral, and social standpoint, it does possess
some weaknesses from a literary standpoint.
And it all begins with the choice in perspective. The novel divided into viewpoints rather than
chapters per se, each is told in the first person, John Redlantern and Tina Spiketree
featuring most prominently. But for each
viewpoint, Beckett is most often unable to instill a unique voice. As a result, the book reads like a
third-person narrative despite the continual pronoun ‘I’. A problem resulting directly from this is the
simplicity of the narrative. It is
understandable that such a technically-deprived, primitive people would not be
speaking Shakespearian English, but that there is no omniscient narrator to
overlay the unsophisticated speech and thought of the characters with a voice
more informed and probing leaves the narrative’s style unambiguously on the
simple side. Again, it was obviously
Beckett’s to present the story as such, but at times it feels too basic when placed alongside
the more sophisticated themes.
This observation aside, Dark
Eden remains a stimulating read with strong sub-layers to ponder upon; the
idea of a stranded group trying to survive in neon darkness can be spun in a
few different directions. Not a typical
hero’s tale, it is a society struggling with the past, present, and future in a
bizarre nighttime world with trippy neon trees and animals. Regardless of one’s religious views, the setting
will leave an impression on the imagination.
Readers who enjoy Ursula Le Guin (Planet of Exile, City of Illusions, etc.) and Brian Aldiss (Non-Stop, Hothouse, Helliconia,
etc.) should also like Beckett’s offering.
Given the primitive nature of the Family and setting, Jean Auel’s Clan of the Cave Bear and Kim Stanley
Robinson’s Shaman also come to mind,
though the parallels to those works are more distant. And lastly, Michael Moorcock’s Behold the Man, for its questioning of
the myth behind Christianity, likewise holds some similarities, though to be
fair, Beckett’s offering is social in aim while Moorcock’s is personal.
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