Deft
prose, in-your-face ideas, cut to the punch mentality—Norman Spinrad is one of
the more contentious voices in the field, if not one of the most welcome for
it. The poet Alicia Ostriker calling all
good art a dance with the devil, Spinrad knows how to tango, challenging the
reader with the forthrightness of his conceptions. Exemplifying these attributes to a socially
relevant T is his 1988 novella “Journals of the Plague Years”. Tackling HIV/AIDS concerns arising at the
time, the story cuts to the bone of social, political, and commercial
involvement with the disease.
“Journals”
and “Years” plural (as opposed to the singularity of Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year), the
novella is divided between four perspectives: a soldier, a researcher, a
senator, and a teenage girl. Not rotated
strictly on waltz rhythm, Spinrad leapfrogs amongst them in developing the
overarching story. HIV exploding in the
US population through rampant sexual activity, massive quarantine zones and
health cards are implemented by the paranoid Christian senator Walter T.
Bigelow in an attempt to keep the virus under control. His program an initial success, the spread of
the disease falters, giving Richard Bruno a chance, deep in his laboratory, to
effect a cure. A cure he does find, but
soon enough the virus mutates, and he’s back at square one. The disease continuing to creep through the
population, Linda Lewin learns, at the tender young age of sixteen, that she’s
Got It. Her parents aghast, she runs
away to find a new life in the San Francisco quarantine zone and there do what
she can before her time is over. But all hell breaks loose when the concerns of
Bruno’s laboratory and the interests of the population at large come to
loggerheads. Infected soldier John Davis
conscripted in his dying days to perform one last mission, the fate of HIV in
the US hangs in the balance.
The prose
fresh and dynamic, “Journals of the Plague Years” is stylistic pleasure. Spinrad imbuing each of his four main
characters with a unique voice, Davis’ ‘kill
‘em all and let God sort ‘em out’ attitude is captured perfectly in word,
while Bigelow’s paranoia oozes from the page.
Lewin’s choices initially turning the skin, one eventually finds empathy
in her situation, while Bruno’s everyday-man attitude likewise finds the
appropriate tone. With hints of Anthony
Burgess, the novella rolls off the page in fine style.
In the
end, “Journals of the Plague Years” is scathing commentary on the US political
and commerical sector’s interests in mass disease, particularly HIV/AIDS. The
government and pharmaceuticals yet to prove their interests entirely opposite
to what Spinrad outlays, the novella remains as relevant today as it did more
than two and a half decades ago. (It is
also forms a nice dichotomous relationship with Michael Bishop’s Unicorn Mountain; similar theme,
different approach.) Caustically
satirical in tone, sharp in style, and getting at the throat of an issue that,
while it has partially diminished its threat from the 80s, remains a threat to
humanity at large, the novella is as readable today as it was twenty-five years
ago.
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