From
cyberpunk’s focus on near-future political and technological concerns to the
explosion of singularity/post-human texts which followed a decade or two later,
science fiction has moved from one end of the temporal spectrum to the
other. Cyberpunk generally more tactile,
concrete, and relevant, post-humanism, by default, spends more of its time
swimming in the waters of fantasy.
Though Charles Stross is best known for conveying just how wacky the
far-future can be, there are other writers who capture the incredible
possibilities of super-futures in intensely aesthetic fashion. Hannu Rajaniemi is one, and his most recent collection
Collected Fiction (2015, Tachyon) is one of the imaginative
reasons why. Whether or not Rajaniemi’s
short fiction as a whole was ready to be collected, however, remains another
question.
Rajaniemi
has one minor collection under his belt (Words
of Birth and Death, three stories), which essentially makes Collected Fiction his first. Bringing together nearly all the short
fiction he has published to date, it confirms the title while adding three
pieces not previously published.
Totaling nineteen stories, none stretch into novella length; all are bite-sized
vignettes of radically technical futures with a dash of mythic/pagan-ized
fantasy.
“Deus Ex
Homine” (translated to ‘god from man’) sets the post-human tone for Collected Fiction.
“As gods go, I wasn’t one of the holier-than-thou,
dying-for-your-sins variety. I was a full-blown transhuman deity with a liquid
metal body, an external brain, clouds of self-replicating utility fog to do my
bidding and a recursively self-improving AI slaved to my volition. I could do
anything I wanted. I wasn’t Jesus, I was Superman: an evil Bizarro Superman.”(1)
Also
Rajaniemi’s first published story, it tells of a man and woman separated by a
godplague—an intrusion of post-humanism that destroyed the man’s corporeal
humanity (he requires a head implant to tell him others’ emotional projections)
and subsequently the relationship. The
emotions are a bit forced, but informs the reader of the type of story to come. Following this story is perhaps Rajaniemi’s
most celebrated short to date: “The Server and the Dragon.” A far-far-far future story of abstract
dimension worthy of Iain Banks’ Excession,
it’s about a world seeding by an AI computer that possesses significantly more
mythic ambiance than hard sf. Mother
Goose on post-human steroids, “Tyche and the Ants” is about a young girl
cavorting on a fairy tale lunar landscape.
But it isn’t before running into the Jade Rabbit, Moon Girl, Hugbear,
and the Brain AI that she meets the miscreant little “ants”. This is the first ever post-human bedtime
story for children I have ever read, and perhaps the best of this collection.
Rajaniemi
apparently having attended the school of writing that purports all short
stories must lead with a catchy line, nearly every piece in Collected Fiction opens on a bizarre sentence
(that only sometimes fulfills itself). “Before the concert, we steal the master’s
head” is the opening of “His Master’s Voice”. Not a take on Stanislaw Lem’s novel, the
story is about a technologically souped up dog and his equally styling partner,
a cat, who attempt to rescue their owner from behind a supposedly impenetrable
firewall. “Elegy for a Young Elk” is a
vibrant, colorful story that exists between native life in the woods and the
flashest, most cyberpunk city one can think of.
Mythical quantum mechanics, it
is the story of man living in a computer generated environment (I think) and
the quest he is sent on to the city by an ex-girlfriend. The plot escalating exponentially, the ending
closes a circle, but seeming one of far too great imaginative circumference for
the length of the story. Would love to
see this in novella length. “Invisible
Planets” is a conversation between a generation starship and one of its
sub-minds about the planets it passes and “The Jugaad Cathedral” is about a guy
who plays a game similar to Minecraft called Dwarfcraft. Using an application called Frendipity to
learn more about another person he plays with, he helps build a virtual Cathedral. Mixing hard sf with gaming, the guy is in for
a surprise when he actually meets her.
But beyond hard/far future sf, there is another vein to Collected Fiction: outright
fantasy. “Fisher of Men” is the story of
a man living in a remote cabin on the Finnish coast who is enticed by a
mer-woman under the sea where a battle for love ensues. “The Viper Blanket” is about a pagan cult
revived in modern times, just managing a slight chill in the spine.
Of the
stories original to collection, the first is “The Haunting of Apollo A7LB.” About a woman who met her astronaut husband
while making his suit, when he dies in space and the suit comes back to live
with her, she makes a special decision. The second original is “Ghost Dogs” and
is not much more than the title indicates.
And the third story is “Skywalker of Earth”. Also the longest of the collection, it shows
scattered focus, limited coherency, but a purpose that doesn’t reveal itself
quickly. All in all, the three originals
feel more like rejected material resurrected for the collection rather than
quality stories worthy of publishing.
As
mentioned in the intro, I remain unsure it was the best move to bring together
all of Rajaniemi’s short fiction at this time, not to mention the
never-before-published stories. Instead
of “here is a selection of quality
stories from a writer who has established himself in the field”, the reader
is presented with “regardless of quality,
here is nearly everything Rajaniemi, a budding sf writer, has published to date”. If this were a retrospective of someone like
Robert Silverberg, Jack Vance, or Theodore Sturgeon who has a long career fans
may not be entirely familiar with, it would be understandable to publish
everything from the beginning of their careers.
But for an up and coming writer, one who has seen some success but has
yet to fully establish himself, it means that a lot of the stories feature an
author still trying to find their voice.
This
feeling-out translates into a couple problem areas. One is the lack of human elements. I don’t
mean the spirit or intentions of humanity, rather the subtle realities that
flesh out a story to make the characters and emotions
concrete. In stories like “His Master’s Voice” or “The
Server and the Dragon”, this is not an issue: it is only a question of how
colorful Rajaniemi’s imagination can be.
But for stories like “Deus ex Homine”, “Topsight”, “The Jugaad
Cathedral”, or “Shibuya, No Love,” human interest forms the core of the story,
and in order for the reader to develop full empathy, particularized aspects of
existence must be present. In the case
of these stories, however, they are usually glazed over—the plot moving
forward, but the characters not developed in rich, convincing style.
A second
issue is a lack of self-awareness regarding tone. At times overly ambitious linguistically, Collected Fiction can be awkward. “The
Server and the Dragon” and “Tyche and the Ants” explode off the page, but
again, the non-far-far-future stories with relatively modern humans at their
center sometimes show a similar bombasticism of language that doesn’t match the
type of story attempting to be told.
“The Jugaad Cathedral,” for example, is, amongst other things,
attempting to be a touching piece of fiction about overcoming odds. Rajaniemi puts the story pieces in their
correct places to achieve this, but due to lack of tone, fails to develop a
full sense of emotion or empathy with the sub-narrative voice. All in all, the range of language in the
collection varies nicely on a word by word basis, but the variety is indiscriminate and not
always tailored to the story.
In the
end, Collected Fiction is not a
lie. Bringing together almost every
short Rajaniemi has published to date, plus a couple extras previously
unpublished, it does what the title indicates.
And sometimes it goes beyond, presenting a few of the author’s paintball,
far-future specials. But was the
collection brought out to quickly? I
think, yes. Certainly there are a couple
of stories key to the far-future movement of sf in the past decade, and there
are a couple other intriguing selections which interest and give the collection
its value. But at the same time, the
overall quality suffers for having everything indiscreetly thrown into the same
pot. The editors seemingly aware of this,
the stronger stories are grouped closer to the front, the rear just hanging
on. Were it me, I would have waited a
couple of years until Rajaniemi had a few additional good, quality shorts under
his belt, then published—not a “Collected Fiction,” but something with a
snappier title that really captures the truly colorful and vividness of his
imagination. If what exists in Collected Fiction is any indication,
those stories will come.
Published
between 2004 and 2015, the following is the table of contents for Collected Fictions:
Deus Ex
Homine
The Server and the Dragon
Tyche and the Ants
The Haunting of Apollo A7LB
His Master’s Voice
Elegy for a Young Elk
The Jugaad Cathedral
Fisher of Men
Invisible Planets (with apologies to Italo Calvino)
The Server and the Dragon
Tyche and the Ants
The Haunting of Apollo A7LB
His Master’s Voice
Elegy for a Young Elk
The Jugaad Cathedral
Fisher of Men
Invisible Planets (with apologies to Italo Calvino)
The Viper
Blanket
Ghost Dogs
Paris, in Love
The Oldest Game
Shibuya no Love
Topsight
Satan’s Typist
Skywalker of Earth
Snow White Is Dead
Unused Tomorrows and Other Stories
Ghost Dogs
Paris, in Love
The Oldest Game
Shibuya no Love
Topsight
Satan’s Typist
Skywalker of Earth
Snow White Is Dead
Unused Tomorrows and Other Stories
Hi Jesse, I have read part of your post, the first half or so because I haven't finished the book and didn't want to read spoilers of the stories I havent't read yet. I think you misinterpreted some details in the plots or situation of some of the stories, or perhaps it was me who did. They are:
ReplyDelete1) On the first story you comment "...a godplague—an intrusion of post-humanism that destroyed the man’s corporeal humanity (he requires a head implant to tell him others’ emotional projections)". The man's corporeal humanity is not actually destroyed, some people become "gods" (men with superpowers, physical men, using AI, nanobots, etc) by hacking and exploiting a leakage in the source code of a (good-intentioned) Superintelligence, and the brain damage of the protagonist, that makes him need an implant, was actually caused when the Superintelligence rescued him from his "god-like" condition, having to intervene areas of his brain to achieve this.
2) In “Elegy for a Young Elk”, you say "it is the story of man living in a computer generated environment", I think this is wrong, at some points in the story it is made clear the wood environment is real (the bear may be able to talk and think through AI-aided genetic engineering for instance); then on entering the city everything gets upside-down, that's a real/virtual environment created by a Superintelligence along with a child's mind.
3) In “The Haunting of Apollo A7LB.”, you write "About a woman who met her astronaut husband while making his suit", well, the astronaut was not her husband but her lover!
Anyway, Rajaniemi's stories are often open to interpretation, not everything is explicitly exposed, consciousness goes in and out virtual and real environments continually, and they demand much effort from the reader to make sense of the plot and the different situations and scenes.
Cheers!
Paco