If there
is anything to be said of Dan Simmons as a person, it’s he’s not shy expressing
his opinion. Equipped with better than
average tools for this expression, reading the story introductions to his 2002
collection Worlds Enough & Time
one realizes the confidence with which he goes about his craft is well
founded. A blessing and a curse, it
allows for effectively focused prose and sustained plotting, much to the
technical benefit of his stories. At the
same time, it does not allow for much second guessing, leading to ideas that
shoot off on questionable tangents—straight, cogent tangents, but questionable
nonetheless.
World Enough and Time, Simmons’ third
collection, contains five selections (two novellas and three novelettes) which,
as a whole, exemplify this polarization: two are standout, while the three remaining
are mediocre to less than. An extremely
varied mix from the point of view of premise, it’s nigh on impossible to
identify common threads save generalities like fantasy, science fiction,
etc. Published between 1995 and 2002,
there is an Earth-bound alien adventure of mountainous heights, an examination
of the history and purpose of the space program, a teacher’s surreal
self-realization, one mini space opera in the Hyperion setting, and another in the Ilium/Olympos
setting.
Readers
looking for more from the Hyperion
universe will find Orphans of the Helix
a pedestrian story that depends little if at all on the novels, while those
looking for more from Ilium/Olympos may be satisfied by the key “The
Ninth of Av” seems to provide in explaining the Earth storyline of the novels,
but will find little else beyond. The
mountain adventure, “On K2 with Kanakaredes”, is likewise a story with limited
integrity. Its elements jammed together
rather than functioning organically, Simmons’ may be guilty of cramming too
much into the novelette. It’s thus up to
the examination of the space program “The End of Gravity” and work of
surrealism Looking for Kelly Dahl to
pull the weight of the collection.
Roth’s story, designed for the screen, works perfectly on the page and
examines the purpose of man in space, while Jakes’ coping with the exigencies
of life is related in metaphorical and poignant fashion.
The
following are brief summaries of the five stories in the collection:
Set in
Simmons’ beloved north-central Colorado, Looking
for Kelly Dahl is the story of Roland Jakes, a former middle-school teacher
fired after his son’s death and alcoholism pushed him to the edge. Suicidal, memories of one of his former
students (the abused Kelly Dahl) haunt his days, leading his mind from
hallucination to reality and back again.
Surreal, Simmons uses art concepts—chiaroscuro, pentimento, palimpsest,
and palinode—to paint the portrait of a man coming to terms with life after
tragedy. Jakes and Dahl’s stories
intertwined in moving fashion, the novella is powerful storytelling hard to
ignore.
“On K2
with Kanakaredes” is a Zelazny-esque story of a climbing expedition with an
insectile alien. Called mantispids, they
have been on Earth for almost ten years when the narrator Jake Pettigrew and
his climbing buds are asked to accompany one of their number to the peak of K2. Focusing on terrain and climbing techniques
(in many ways a precursor the novel The
Abominable ), some nature and
spiritualism are tossed in to round out this rather bland story.
Simmons
credits a Star Trek pitch as his
inspiration for his novella return to the Hyperion
universe. Orphans of the Helix that
story, indeed the manner in which
things pan out has a strong feel for the world of Gene Rodenberry. A colony seed ship called Helix is traveling across the Void Which
Binds roughly three hundred years after the events of The Rise of Endymion and encounters a strange anomaly: a binary
system broadcasting a distress signal on old frequencies. Finding a forest ring around one of the suns,
the ship is almost immediately greeted by Ousters who have adapted wings powered
by radiation. A problem of dire
circumstances threatening the Ouster’s forest colony revealed, it’s up to the
leaders of the Helix to find a
solution. With elements of Robert
Silverberg’s Nightwings and Arthur C.
Clarke’s “Sunjammer” in tow, Simmons tells a retro tale that, while not living
up to the big concept space opera of Hyperion,
does have a robust Star Trek flair.
Initially
a treatment for a film script (which it still partially bears the format of),
“The End of Gravity” is an inspired novelette which probes the reasons man goes
into space. Told through the eyes of an
ageing American writer, Norman Roth is sent to Russia to do a piece about the
remnants of the now defunct Russian space program. Simmons’ finely balancing character with
background, the reasons humans choose to go beyond Earth’s atmosphere is
unearthed. A taut, poised piece that
very well could be made into a film, Simmons’ coverage of the Soviet space
program’s history, slow reveal of Roth’s past, and the coalescence of it all
into a thought-provoking quandary are readily commendable. (Though differing in
aim, “End of Gravity” forms a nice counterpoint to Andy Duncan’s The Chief Designer, as does Arthur C.
Clarke’s The City & the Stars.)
The first
foray into the Ilium/Olympos universe (at least the scenes
set on Earth), “The Ninth of Av” is the story of the aging Jew Savi and her
discoveries on far future Earth before the final fax. Despite being something a Rosetta Stone for
the novels, the novelette remains convoluted.
With its South Pole exploration historical exposition, coupled with far
future quantum tech, latched onto WWII nightmares, hitched to a puzzle mystery,
connected to a wealth of tech and gadgets and robots with little to no
background, it’s a muddled story that deserves the novel length expansion it
eventually received. Otherwise, these
first few ideas lack cohesion.
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