Reading
Charles Stross is like trying to stand on top of a beach ball. Quickly shifting and counter-shifting left,
right, and forward, a person cannot stop even for the briefest of moments to
question what they are doing, or they will lose their balance. The author’s stories appreciable by those who
don’t mind tagging along to mimic the changes in direction, any deeper
examination distracts a person to the point of falling off; you just have to
accept it for what it is. After all,
what is the point of trying to stand on a beach ball?
Stross’s
2005 novella Missile Gap is a good
example of his work. Repainting reality,
it tells the story of government officials in 1971 trying to figure out what
has happened to the Earth. No longer a sphere, our world has been transposed
onto a massive disk hundreds of thousands of years in the far future. The disk so huge in fact, moving east and
west beyond the limits of our world’s map reveals new continents and lands, not
all of which are readily explainable.
The Cold War put on hold for numerous reasons, not the least of which
related to the inability of nuclear ICBM missiles to traverse the Arctic on
their way to Russia or the US, each seeks to take advantage of the new found
situation and lands. Discoveries made
one at a time, the secret behind what has brought Earth to its flat Earth
scenario is shocking.
It is also
incredibly cheesy. I can respect
entertainment for entertainment’s value, but when a relatively sober look at an
alternate history Cold War reveals itself to be, well, what it is, it’s
difficult to take the effort seriously.
To put this another way, when a story which appears to have relevancy
deteriorates into cartoon land, the question is begged: what was the point
beyond a larff? Lovecraft fans, on the
other hand, will love it.
Stross
cannot be faulted for style, however. In
fact, this is one of his more restrained, and therefore cohesive efforts. By holding back the gusto of lingoism,
devil-may-care storytelling, and whatever idea pops into his mind at the
moment, the novella benefits. It’s
obvious there was an outline and a structure, allowing Stross to effectively
deliver the narrative portion of the story.
Likewise, a lot is written between the lines, which at least engages the
reader, regardless of story outcome.
In the
end, Missile Gap is an alternate
physics/history/Earth scenario played out with the Cold War as the main
motif. There are plenty of characters
and scenes, all logically fitted together into a puzzle that is resolved adeptly but cheesily a la Lovecraft. I have read reviews that
complain Stross did not develop the world enough. I would disagree; it is, in fact, very
efficient getting from point a to b in engaging fashion.
Some of the leg work must be done by the reader between the lines, but
the picture created is concrete. Indeed it’s even clever. But to what end?
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