Eclipse is an ambitious
project by Jonathan Strahan to mimic some of the more well known speculative
fiction anthologies of yesteryear by soliciting stories which capture the feel
of the times. A solid collection of
shorts, Eclipse One featured not only
some of the best writers of short fiction at the beginning of the 21st
century, but stories which would go on to receive award nominations. Eclipse
Two, the second in what would become a four book series, while aiming at
the same target, does not capture the zeitgeist in the same manner, but is more
progressive, more investigative as it explores the potential direction
speculative fiction, particularly science fiction, may be headed. The following are brief summaries of the
fifteen pieces in the anthology:
“The
Hero” by Karl Schroeder is an abstract note on which to open the
anthology. The setting disassociating,
it requires patience to see through the web of illusion Schroeder has spun
using ordinary words like ‘bug’, ‘dragon’, and ‘capitol’ to represent things
which are anything but ordinary in his imagined world. Japanese anime present in much of the imagery
of this distinctly non-Earth sci-fi setting, the story is of Jessie and his
plight to ‘save’ humanity in its multi-sun domain. Seeming to need a little more flesh for
complete coherence, the story is nevertheless unique and sets the tone for the
whole of what is to come.
“Turing's
Apples” by Stephen Baxter is a story I’ve read somewhere before, I just can’t
put my finger on it. Utilizing familiar elements of Silver Age sci-fi (radio
signals from extra-terrestrials, super-computers, and lunar antennas), as well
as the age-old motif of sparring brothers and rational vs. emotional
intelligence, the story nevertheless is readable for the combination. Unoriginal, it is hard sci-fi in short form
ending on both a sappy and sense-of-wonder note that is very much in the vein
of Gregory Benford, Stephen Baxter, Greg Egan, and Isaac Asimov.
“Invisible
Empire of Ascending Light” by Ken Scholes is more sci-fi I’ve read in slightly
different form elsewhere. Certain Words
capitalized so the Reader knows which are Important, Scholes plods through a
tried-and-true Plot of a Cultural Revolution in “If one Ascends, another must Descend.” style. For this story to have the impact it desired,
a stronger background would be needed, as the point toward which it builds feels
underwhelming without the context.
“Michael
Laurits Is: Drowning” by Paul Cornell is the shortest in the collection. More a future history and less a story, it
tells of the eponymous man—a scientist—and his post-human escape from death
after a terrorist attack. Cornell having
the technical lingo down, he also has a finger or two on the pulse of human
reaction to the first man to go digital.
Short but quality.
“Night
of the Firstlings” by Margo Lanagan is a story whose exterior will be
surprising once readers learn the motor driving it. Very much in Lanagan’s style, intrusions of
the fantastic into the real re-tell this Biblical tale of the night the
archangel came and took a city’s firstborn.
A personal, emotional retelling, the subject family’s point of view goes
a long way toward describing the terrors that would have been.
“Elevator”
by Nancy Kress is a forced concept that does not better itself for the twist at
the end. When a hospital elevator stops
between floors, seven unlucky people must wait for help. None attempting to escape through the roof
hatch or to pry open the doors, a collection of diametrically opposed
personalities are forced to coexist in claustrophobic conditions, the words of
a batty old woman meandering between.
The prose less than polished, the story feels like a homework assignment
turned in at the last moment; it meets the teacher’s requirements, but barely.
“The
Illustrated Biography of Lord Grimm” by Daryl Gregory is a comic book story in
more ways than one, and for this reason is largely unique. On the surface play elements of gritty
superheroes (I was reminded of Watchmen), while at depth an all too
standard good vs. evil mindset serves to undermine the proceedings. The story of a fictional Trovenia under
attack by the dreaded U-Men of America, the locals employ their Slaybots,
mechanized gear, and all other manner of steampunk-ery in defending their beloved
land and villainous leader. Gregory
seeming to enjoy the scene setting and tech more than telling a purposeful
story, a fair amount of nice description meanders to a weak finish.
“Exhalation”
by Ted Chiang is a fascinating story of a robot-man who dissects
himself. Not a grisly description of
wires, fluids, tubes, and lubricants, the story is set within a society wherein air
tanks, called lungs, need to be replaced every day and the brain is composed of
leafed gold foils stamped with symbols and formulas. Highly reminiscent of Stanisław Lem, this is
the stand-out piece not only in the anthology, but perhaps for the year in
short fiction. (Interesting fact: this story contains not a word of dialogue.)
“Down
and Out in the Magic
Kingdom” by David Moles
is near impossible to describe in accessible terms in one sentence except to
say it is the intersection of futuristic computer gaming and reality. A wild combination of tropes whose complexity
requires a significant amount of untangling, the purpose of the story would
seem to drown in the cleverness of the milieu.
Weirdness with spotty coherence, bits of the known are mixed with much
more of the unknown in this disorienting look at post-humanism in a gaming
context.
“The
Rabbi's Hobby” by Peter S. Beagle is the story of a boy and the titular rabbi’s
search for the girl on a magazine cover.
Getting ready for the boy’s Bar Mitzfah, preparation time gets eaten
into as one clue after another about the girl’s identity start surfacing. Beagle’s story one of the best of Eclipse One, in Two he continues to blend quality storytelling with subtle themes
in this story of belief, the supernatural, and universal love set during America’s
Golden Age.
“The
Seventh Expression of the Robot General” by Jeffrey Ford is more a history and
less a story of the great Robot General of the Harvang wars. Dreaded in battle and a celebrity in peace
time, this one-off is filled with vivid description—one of Ford’s
specialties—but lacks meaningful substance beyond. “I’ve got an idea; let’s see where it goes.”
kind of story, it possesses impact in the moment, but little beyond.
“Skin
Deep” by Richard Parks is a typical tale of the genre. It is the story of the witch Ceren, her many
skins which give differing personalities, and the civil strife of the Medieval-esque
land she inhabits. When called into a
fight as Soldier one day, things get interesting. Not a notable tale, but enjoyable enough as
light entertainment.
“Ex
Cathedra” by Tony Daniel is a downward spiral of a story. I wish I could say
that I am going to spin the metaphor into something positive, but in this case
the meaning is straight-forward. Opening on the line “My children have been
stolen”, shifting to time travel and the ‘paradox’ of being unable to have
children while time traveling, moving to a galaxy sized cathedral under
construction, moving to cosmic fornication, to time jumps, to virtual
existences, to confused relationships… well, the reader gets the picture. Daniel seeming to cram too many ideas into
this hard sci-fi story, by the end desperation sets in as still many
ideas remain but so few pages in which to add them. All in all, it is not a wholly coherent story, a fact
not helped by the workaday prose.
“Truth
Window: A Tale of the Bedlam Rose” by Terry Dowling is the story of a far
future Earth under alien occupation.
Trussed up in clothes that disguise the figure beneath, the story is in
fact quite a standard one (societal revolution) but is dressed up in
descriptions, lingo and neologisms of the future, making it original to some
degree. Like Schroeder, Gregory, and
Moles, Dowling is attempting to clothe the genre in something wholly fresh.
The
opposite mindset, “Fury” by Alastair Reynolds appears to be a tribute to Isaac
Asimov, particularly his Robot
stories. In the wake of an assassination
attempt on the emperor, the chief of security Mercurio is tasked with finding
who perpetrated the act. Robots, good
and bad, coming out of the woodwork in the course of the investigation,
Reynolds walks paths worn thin by science fiction detective fiction in telling
his story. For those whose genre view is
limited to such stories, undoubtedly “Fury” will be entertaining. For those who are looking for something more
than Silver Age sci-fi in the 21st century, the story may not have value
beyond tribute.
Eclipse Two, unlike Eclipse One, is majority sci-fi. From steampunk to hard sci-fi, the future of
gaming to classic detective noir, the collection is also 90% male authors. There is a scattering of fairy and fantasy,
but by and large the anthology is more ‘futuristic’ than ‘supernatural’ in
style. Many of the stories by up and
coming writers, and therefore experimental to some degree (i.e. attempting
originality), there are some successes and failures of coherence along the
way. Re-visioning genre tropes can be an
effective means to progress the field, but in the case of many of these
stories, still falls short of storytelling with a purpose. This creates an interesting juxtaposition. Eclipse One features stories which are more ‘standard’ in presentiment, while Eclipse Two sees authors attempting to
break existing molds. However, given
less of the writers are established, Two
falls short in the quality of the writing.
Many of the authors are simply not stylists, or are still learning the
ropes of the craft, resulting in stories with strong potential, but with only
partially convincing presentation.
Strahan striking platinum with Chiang’s story, by far the best is
“Exhalation”. Located smack in the
middle, it is the balloon which buoys the anthology.
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