Brian
Stableford, though perhaps best known for his science fiction, is also a
scholar of fiction at large. The isfdb lists more than 30 works of
non-fiction under his name, the overwhelming majority of which are in some way
linked to speculative fiction. The first
a study of the works of James Blish (1979), the latest is a collection of
essays on decadence (2010). But it is
sixteen years earlier which saw Stableford digging into the latter subject, but
in fictional form. The novella “Le Fleurs du Mal” published in 1994, Stableford
uses ideas from the literature of the 18th and 19th century to tell a science
fictional story that paints Nathaniel Hawthorne and Oscar Wilde in the
technicolor of future bourgeoise. Oh,
and there’s a little Sherlock Holmes thrown in for good measure.
“Le Fleurs
du Mal” (translated as “The Flowers of Evil”) takes Hawthorne’s short story
"Rappaccini's Daughter" and cross pollinates it (sorry, couldn’t
resist) with Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray to examine the human side of extended life for the
affluent. An idea fruitfully examined in
other such novellas as Robert Silverberg’s “Sailing to Byzantium” and Frederik
Pohl’s “Outnumbering the Dead” among others, Stableford puts his own spin on
things by making the story something of a whodunit while focusing on the
artistic, profligate side of genetic/biological manipulation of the human
body. Presented with an underlying
purpose, the serial killer mystery mode is used to examine a future wherein the
rich are able to rejuvenate themselves and genetics can be engineered across
flora and fauna, that is, rather than thrills and chills.
Flower
geneticist extraordinaire, the brilliantly handsome Oscar Wilde is admiring his
third rejuvenation in a mirror when a note arrives, asking him to go to the
home of Gabriel King, a prominent businessman he once worked with. Arriving at the home he discovers detective
Charlotte Holmes already investigating the death of King. A most bizarre death, all that remains of
King is a bare skeleton wreathed in flowers. Wilde quickly recognizing the
flowers as the work of one Rappaccini, video footage reveals the presence of a
woman in the apartment just before King died.
Another note arriving soon thereafter requesting Wilde and Charlotte to
proceed to another location, they find there another flower-wreathed
corpse. What follows is a journey around
the world and into the mind of a murderer bent on beauty, revenge, and
something more.
Where
Silverberg and Pohl examined the humane aspects of im/mortality, Stableford
looks at the idea with more of an artistic eye, the humanity innately seeping
through. Stableford’s style crisp and
smooth, he even has time to lay down a few aphorisms of his own (in honor of
Wilde, obviously) outlining the human involvement with, and reaction to, the
manifestations of decadence possible via genetic and biological science of the
future. Stableford’s later “Mortimer Gray’s History of Death” perhaps a
more ambitious novella, “Le Fleurs du Mal” is, if anything, at least an
original take on the subject of human self-indulgence in extended life with
suitable dabbling in literature of old.
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