Monday, June 8, 2015
After these messages....
For that thimbleful of readers who regularly make their way to my blog, Speculiction will be on a 3-week hiatus whilst I gallivant about the globe. Be back in July!
Saturday, June 6, 2015
Review of Zoo City by Lauren Beukes
It was a
brisk autumn afternoon in the grungy backstreets of Johannesburg. Moving in fits and starts, a draft manuscript
of Charles Stross’ latest Laundry Files
novel danced along the pavement, buffeted by the wind. The margins full of notes, he was undecided
how heavy to lay on the tech and magic. Should
I go all out, from www brain implants to wizards, or keep things relaxed, just
a little social media and a touch of voodoo?
At the same time and place, Philip Pullman, pique on his tongue and
time to kill, was looking for a place to relax into a pint or two. But just as he spied a promising pub, the
draft manuscript whipped up and slapped him in the face. Peeling the papers away and holding them at
arm’s length, he entered and sat down, ordered a glass of bitter, and took a
look at what fate had sent his way.
Immediately intrigued, he didn’t notice when the beer arrived. So absorbed, in fact, he began scribbling his
own notes—character needs animal familiar,a
strong, toothy one—but which? Crocodile? Alligator?... And this one?
Mongoose? Sloth? Pullman so deep in concentration, it took
the man sitting at a nearby table several tries to get his attention. “Hi, my name is Bill Gibson. Looks like you’ve got some run ons, hanging
clauses, and more than a few over-indulgent metaphors there. Let me see if I can’t help you tighten up that
story a little—give it an edge you can cut with, you know?” The rest, as they say, is Lauren Beukes’ 2010 Zoo City.
The above
introduction would seem to render Zoo
City imitative rather than original. That was only half the intention. By setting her story in a fully realized,
near-future version of Johannesburg, giving her main characters singular voices,
and having her own thematic aims, Beukes transforms the tropes and styles of
Stross, Pullman, and Gibson into a combination of her own making. The influences are readily apparent, but the
creation is of its own design—at least mostly.
Labels:
animal fantasy,
fantasy,
science fantasy,
science fiction
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Review of The Stars Seem So Far Away by Margret Helgadottir
I am far from the most knowledgeable person on the subject,
but in my web wandering and scattered reading it has certainly come to my
attention that post-apocalyptic YA fiction is ‘a thing’ (or at least recently
was ‘a thing’). A sub-genre niche
publishers and authors have rushed to capitalize on, the number of titles in
the sphere has risen sharply. But as
with all such rushes, one must pick and choose carefully; quality requires weeding
from quantity.
Margret Helgadottir The
Stars Seem So Far Away (2015,
Fox Spirit Books) is post-apocalyptic YA fiction. Part of the third-wave of such texts, it
wears its taxonomy on its sleeve. But
the devil is in the details.
The Stars Seem So Far
Away is ostensibly a collection. But
it quickly becomes apparent that the stories function more like point-of-view
chapters, creating a cycle that rolls toward an all-inclusive conclusion. A handful of teens anchoring this overarching
story, Aida, Bjorn, Simik, Nora, Zaki, and a couple of others start at
different points in a Europe torn apart by catastrophe and plague, but eventually
wind up together in the same plight.
Foregoing the sensationalist details that many other post-ap YA novels
seem to focus on (looking at you, Bacigalupi), Helgadottir keeps the spotlight on
the young people, their interrelationships and emotional stances, and their
reactions to the events they experience traversing the scarred landscape,
trying to stay alive and find a better life.
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Review of Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner
Ellen
Kushner’s delightful little 1987 fantasy snack Swordspoint is a difficult book to review. Plot-centric, review content could be a
simple rehash of the storyline. To avoid
this, I will suffice at saying the novel is a theatrically-moded story
centering on swordsmen and the surrounding lords and ladies in an unnamed Renaissance-ish
land. Character appropriately (even
uniquely) built and located in a larger web of intrigue and personal strife,
Kushner does a fine job unveiling her story, suspense and subsequent revelation
in keeping quality-wise. From a plot
point of view, the novel is wholly enjoyable and best to be discovered by the
reader.
But where Swordspoint is deserving of further
commentary starts with the subtitle: A
Melodrama of Manners. Pleasingly
underscoring the story in a phrase, the comedic elements are indeed tucked
inside a subtly tongue-in-cheek tale that purposefully and delicately treads
the line between maudlin and mimetic.
Kushner finding a fitting pseudo-Victorian tone and holding tight to it
from the beginning to end, the arrogant nobles and desperate rogues are given
voices that uphold an outlay to be enjoyed for its humor and paid attention to
for plotting. In other words, the reader
knows what they are reading is not intended as serious literature, but at the
same time wants to keep reading for the wit inherent to the text and the obvious
intelligence guiding the undercurrents of character and plot.
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