Breaking into the business with Silver Age space opera but putting
himself on the map by writing intelligent dystopia with a social conscience,
few are aware that for a brief moment John Brunner put aside science fiction
and dabbled in fantasy. After the
success of Stand on Zanzibar, The Jagged Orbit, and The Sheep Look Up, he wrote the four
novelettes starring the other-wordly
traveler in black. Unconventional to say the least, the
eponymous collection is fantasy without being fantasy. A wizard (of sorts) may be the common thread
binding the stories together, but humanity is at stake. The novelettes thus embrace the general idea
of genre, but eschew its epic-ness in favor of parables.
“He had many names, but
one nature, and this unique nature made him subject to certain laws not binding
upon ordinary persons. In a compensatory fashion, he was also free from certain
other laws more commonly in force.” is the quote which opens the first
novelette in the collection, “Imprint of Chaos”. The traveler in black seen carrying only a
staff of light, he walks the land granting wishes in satirical fashion, fending
off the ingress of Chaos to give Order its place. And indeed the city of Ryovora requires every
ounce of his wisdom if they are to survive the malevolent enchanter who seeks
to twist the roots of the people’ ideology to the rudiments of a forgotten
era.
“Break the Door of Hell”, the second novelette in the
collection, is another story with morals of human dimension. Believing its ancestors have set them on the
wrong path, the people of Ys request the traveler in black resurrect the town’s
dead in order that they might berate the sentient corpses and force them to
provide the labor necessary to get the town back into shape. Getting more than they wished for, the town’s
folk later come to the traveler with even more desperate requests.
After a terrible calamity strikes the village of Wantwich, the
traveler in black confronts the General guilty of the destruction and makes him
an offer he can’t refuse. “The Wager
Lost by Winning” a clever tale, it’s up to the reader to discover whether life
is indeed nothing but a punt.
The only of the stories to be nominated for an award (the
Hugo, interestingly enough), “Dread Empire” tells of the traveler in black’s
usage of Four Elementals towards teaching wisdom to the Duke and chandler of a
small town. The note upon which the
story ends, however, may be of most important regarding the collection as a
whole.
In the end, The Traveler
in Black is a collection of morally enlightening tales. Brunner writing in the dense style readers of
his other works will be familiar with, it’s possible to pick at random any of
the parables as none are connected in a linear sense, though, given the manner
in which “Dread Empire” ends, it’s best to read it last. Formulaic, Brunner reintroduces his main
character through humorous wish grantings at the outset of each novelette,
little if any work having been completed prior to compiling the four stories to
smoother blend them together. Nothing exceptionally notable about the
collection, and neither nothing particularly terrible, they are run-of-the-mill
stories which have seeped into history of the genre and would have perhaps
better to have been fleshed out into novella length. For those looking for a comparison, I would
easily nominate Moorcock’s Elric as a
notable parallel as each deal with the war between Order/Law and Chaos. The
Traveler in Black later republished as The
Compleat Traveler in Black upon the release of a fifth novelette, “The
Things That Are Gods”, readers be warned that if this review sounds intriguing,
there are other options.
I picked up a copy of this a few days ago... And Double, Double (1969), and a collection of his short works, Not Before Time (1968).... But then again, I'm a Brunner completist.
ReplyDeleteI've not read anywhere near as much Brunner as you, but thus far the Man in Black is the author's only unequivocal work of fantasy I've read. Do you know of any more?
DeleteSpeaking of Brunner completists *cough, cough*... I still need Double, Double and Jagged Orbit, which is odd since these are typically more accessible than most of his work. I can't name any other fantasy work Brunner did. Not sure if The Book of John Brunner (1976), which I own, has any fantasy in it, but it has everything else: poetry, a crossword, shot stories, essays, etc.
ReplyDeleteA crossword?!?! And if I may infer: a science fiction crossword?!?!?!? I don't see the collection in your Review Directory, so I guess I'll have to wait to see that explained. :)
DeleteIt's a cryptic style British crossword with a few SF themes, for example:
ReplyDelete(1 across)--At this rate it looks as though spaceflight is going to be out of the questions [6,4,5];
(27 across)--Feel happy about a difficult writer? Well, not quite [7];
(18 down)--Maybe it's its ergs that make this cat deadlier than the male [7].
Intriguing...
Delete..and it's in the next batch to be read (in the next year or two at this dismal rate).
ReplyDelete