Ursula Le
Guin’s The Word for World is Forest
(1976) is a (novella extended into a) novel that features an alien planet
invaded by humanity and exploited for its resources, the natives forced into
labor. An open allegory regarding the
United State’s involvement in Vietnam, it is a compact novel that remains
focused on three main points throughout: corporate/political greed, respect for
traditional cultures, and the need to find reconciliation between the
two. Elizabeth Bear’s 2007 Undertow is precisely the same story,
but with additional focus on science fiction/fantasy concepts, added character
viewpoints, and all upgraded for the 21 st century.
The Ranid peacefully
inhabited Greene’s World, that is, until humanity colonized the water planet,
discovered omelite, and put them to work extracting the valuable resource. An amphibian species, the Ranid swim the
great ocean of Greene’s World in harmony with the planet but are no match for
the weapons and technology of the Charter Trade Company. The Ranids who can remain in hiding do, but
there is a significant portion pressganged into working the platforms and
undersea tunnels mining the precious material.
Humanity
is centered in Nova Haven, the great human floating city of Greene’s
World. A world-wide net connecting its
citizens, most wear headgear to stay continuously in touch with data, friends,
and work. One such citizen is André
Deschênes—a professional assassin with a big heart. Hired by the Charter to take down one of the
chief agitators and supporters of Ranid rights, the social and commercial
fabric of the planet comes apart in the aftermath of the kill.
Undertow starring more than one character, Bear packs
the story with several viewpoints in order to represent all sides of the
conflict. From the assassin to the
uber-evil CEO of the Charter Trade Company, lovers to scientists, and, perhaps
the most interesting piece of the novel, a few of the Ranids themselves. Called ‘froggies’ by the humans given the
similarity, they fully occupy the role of alien in several interesting ways.*
But
viewpoints are not the only thing there are a lot of in Undertow; sf ideas are another.
More science fantasy than science fiction, Bear really scrapes the
bottom of the plausibility barrel with some of the concepts she tries to foist
on the reader, while others remain tried and true. Cyberpunk pretty much covering the net-tech employed,
readers will find nothing new in Connex and head gear. But what is used, is used effectively. The same rings true of the transportation
tech and space ships in relation to classic sf.
It’s thus in the convolution of quantum mechanics and probability to
predict or create a desired future event that the novel’s creativity frays
completely. Multiple hands waving, it’s
a cheap idea utlilized when the author wants and conveniently forgotten when
the scene could otherwise be drastically affected by it. If anything could be orchestrated with the
power of ‘conjuring’, why didn’t the bad guys simply stack the odds in their
favor at all times instead of just ‘when drama calls’? The result: plot holes.
Regarding
the remainder, Undertow is a novel so
evenly balanced as to render itself mediocre.
And it starts with prose.
Workaday, it is neither beautiful or ugly, nor adds to or subtracts from
the tale. Building on this, the
characters are not pale; they have some color, but still fail to achieve
realism. They feel like those from a
mainstream sf novel—sketched effectively but not living, breathing souls. (I don’t know which is worse: the uber-evil
CEO or ‘kind killer’.) Plot continually
moves forward and hops between viewpoints effectively, but it too is spread
thin. Action, character study, genocide,
emotional portrait, native uprising—what does the novel want to be? It’s ok to combine all of them, but emphasis
must go one way or another. As it
stands, the combination is undecided, and as such, unrepresentative.
But not
everything is lukewarm. The setting is
unbalanced—in a positive sense. It (and
the Ranids) are the aspects of Undertow
best developed. The heat, humidity,
storms, swamps, and froggies who live in symbiosis effectively described, the
planet and its natives are the components that stick most firmly in the mind. The ending is likewise unbalanced, albeit
wholly negatively. As abrupt as slamming
into a wall, the attempt at sensitivity of character and cultural relations is
offset by being able to solve problems by blowing stuff up and melodramatic
deaths. ‘Nuff said.
In the
end, Undertow is a novel that exists
at a lot of midpoints, including quality.
Somewhere between planetary adventure and alien rebellion, soft science
fiction and Hollywood drama, imaginative technology and emotional character
study—none seem to get full attention, yet none are ignored, the outcome a middling
mix. Featuring a spread of characters,
including aliens, caught up in an underground rebellion against an evil
corporation, Bear trundles the story along rather conventional lines to a
sudden conclusion that seems to have warranted a little more denouement than it
received. Not as focused an effort as The Word
for World as Forest, readers of one nevertheless may enjoy the other. Fans
of C.J. Cherryh, whose brand of science fiction Bear’s bears some resemblance
to, may also enjoy.
*One of
these ways is how amphibian asexuality is taken advantage of in terms of gender
nomenclature. The Ranids possessing no
he/she, him/her, etc., all are referred to as ‘se’. This is interesting not
in the destroy-gender-boundaries sense, rather in the fact nobody in 2007 made
any hullabaloo about it. Yet, in
2013/2014, all the talk was of Ann Leckie having done the same thing in Ancillary Justice. Goes to show how superficial much genre media
is. If toying with gender pronouns
really were such a significant event, the hullabaloo would have been in 2007.
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