Fully
believing that “the catastrophe story,
whoever may tell it, represents a constructive and positive act by the
imagination rather than a negative one, and an attempt to confront a patently
meaningless universe by challenging it at its own game”, J.G. Ballard set
about writing his third of four disaster novels. The first featuring a world inundated with
water, for the third he went the opposite direction: drought. The
Burned World (1964) its apposite title, human reaction to extreme
environmental conditions is once again the subject under examination. Ballard would later revise the text, and as a result it has come to be known most predominantly as The Drought.
The Drought is the story of Edward
Ransom, a doctor living on a houseboat in the fictional town of Mount
Royal. The over-usage of industrial
chemicals having created an insoluble layer on the ocean’s surface, water is
unable to evaporate, and for the second straight year, Earth is experiencing
drought conditions. Ransom’s houseboat
stuck in the mud flats of the river that flows through the small city, at the
outset he is considering joining the mass exodus of residents to the coast
where water, though salty, is available in abundance. Chaos taking over as conditions worsen,
looting, fires, and religious skirmishes abound, Ransom soon finds himself in a
fight for his life, the weather only one threat.
Though The Drought is only Ballard’s third
novel, his descriptive powers are on full display. The dry heat, the dust, the
scarcity of water—all emanate from the page palpably. Life reduced to a slow plod, the sun beats
down on Ransom as he makes his journey to the depths of human existence. Events eventually taking Ransom beyond Mount
Royal, his plight can be imagined quite vividly thanks to Ballard’s evocative
style.
Yet
landscape and events are only secondary blips on Ballard’s radar. The spectrum of character, including Ransom,
is the main focus in The Drought. Representative rather than realistic, each is
one-dimensional, but of a dimension analogous to varying aspects of the human
psyche. Consistent to the point of
surrealism, Quilter and the zoo, young Philip and the old Mr. Jordan, the
mysterious Lomax, Reverend Johnstone and the fishermen—each contribute to the
mosaic of humanity around Ransom, yet likewise inform the psychological
demographics of the underlying story.
It’s thus possible to relate to the characters at two levels: the
symbolic and the mimetic.
If there’s
anything The Drought fails to
achieve, it’s a sense of urgency, or tension.
Ballard’s The Crystal World a
novel with a very similar premise, character usage, and aim, the fact he makes
the protagonist of that novel both inquisitive and reactive contrasts the
rather phlegmatic manner with which Ransom exists within the chaos around
him. ‘Exist’ is thus the proper
word. He acts of his own volition on a
rarity of occasions, the remainder seemingly overridden by a Daoist ‘what will
come, will come’ philosophy. Thus, if Ballard’s intentions were indeed to
explore the human reaction to catastrophe, it must be in the characters surrounding
Ransom where attention is placed.
In the
end, The Drought is a solid
novel that exemplifies many of Ballard’s strengths as a writer. Vivid descriptions, a dynamic array of
characters, and insight into the human psyche characterize the work. But for all the quality ingredients, the book
fails to capture the same electricity found in the novel which follows, The Crystal World. Very similar works, Ballard floats The Drought rather than driving it,
however. Little seeming to be lacking on
a scene by scene basis, at a deeper, more cohesive level the story does not
resonate with the same verve. Thus in
the context of Ballard’s other novels, The Drought does not stand amongst his greats, while in comparison to the
field at large, it possesses a talent many writers never achieve.
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