While
for many people cave paintings strike little aesthetic interest due to their
simplicity, it’s virtually impossible for a person not to ruminate upon the
circumstances of what brought them into existence. Religious art, Louvres of the past, or mere
pre-historic vandalism, we can only speculate on the larger significance of the
paintings to the groups of humans who created them thousands and thousands of
years ago.
Perhaps
the least likely inspiration for a science fiction novel, Kim Stanley Robinson
nevertheless took one such cave painting as inspiration, the Chauvet Cave in
France, and created its backstory in Shaman
(2013). Rich in prehistoric detail, from
social function to sheer survival in the Ice Age, speculation on life before
recorded history may never been as realistically or engagingly created in fiction.
Opening
on a Jack London “To Light a Fire” note, Shaman
starts with the young man Loon being sent out on his rite of passage: two weeks
in the wild with nothing to aid him save the brains in his head. Leaving camp naked on a cold and rainy day,
Loon must find, kill, or make everything he needs to survive, from fire to
food, clothes to shelter. Living through
the ordeal, he is welcomed back to Wolf Pack and expected to formally begin his
training under Thorn, the group’s head shaman.
Through a bountiful summer and back into the cold teeth of winter Loon
acquires knowledge, finds love, and becomes a stronger member of the
tribe. But when tragedy strikes the
group the following year, he is forced into the wild yet again to regain what
is lost.
An
interesting aspect of Shaman is that
it features Robinson at, perhaps, his most relaxed. With the technology of the setting nearly as
limited as human life could have it, plotting takes center stage. As such (i.e. the majority of Robinson’s
other fiction), what knowledge we have of primitive human life in Europe is
bound up in story rather than info-dumps.
Loon’s story an adventurous one, moving across the European continent
from the south of France to an England frozen over with ice and snow, the reader
gets to see more of Robinson’s pure storytelling skills.
Along
with the bare skills necessary to survive in the Ice Age, Shaman provides Robinson a chance to speculate on how societies of
the time may have been constructed and operated. Wolf Pack a semi-anarchical society, the
shaman Thorn is not by default leader, nor is the man Schist who often makes
key decisions about food storage and dealing with other packs as their dominant
alpha male, nor is the hard wisdom and dominance of Thorn’s wife. Everyone having a role, from the women to men
to children, the exigencies of their situation force the people to respect
mortality more than any petty differences leading to dissension. Disagreement and separation happen, but
always food and shelter for the morrow come as top priority.
The
general “civilized” presentation of Wolf Pack is refreshing. Beyond any Far Side joke about “Zug want meat” Shaman portrays
primitive humanity as capable of organization, having a calendar, being able to
negotiate and trade with other tribes, of celebrating holidays, and knowing
rudimentary medicines. Save their
contact with nature and limits of technology, the people of Shaman resemble humanity of today—an apt
perspective. There is true celebration in the kill of an elk, sex is more open,
and religion is bound up in aspects of nature, that is, rather than any
polytheistic hierarchy or monotheistic deity, but nevertheless the people are
people we know, not abstract extrapolations (like Zug).
One
interesting aspect of Shaman is that
Robinson includes “Old Ones.” The
singular sapien rather than the
doubled, the prior version of hominids on Earth flash in and out of the story’s
picture. Our modern brains often
believing a line exists between homo
sapien and homo sapien sapien,
Robinson puts the fade of the former alongside the rise—or at least survival
of—the latter. I only wish there were
mammoths…
In
the end, Shaman is a fascinatingly
realistic view of human life in Europe during the Ice Age. From the little details of fire-building to
snares and traps, Robinson takes the cave paintings of Chauvet Cave as his
inspiration to tell the coming-of-age tale of an apprentice shaman in a
community of early humans living in what would be southern France today. Robinson having obviously read deeply on the
literature available to speculate on the lives of prehistoric humans, this is a
story whose imagery via the small details of a life with basic technology will
really stick with the reader—or at least me.
Great review! I spent a couple of hours looking at the pictures of Chauvet Cave after finishing the book. His descriptions are very vivid.
ReplyDeleteThanks, there is also a 70-80 minute documentary on the cave which brings in a wide-ranging group of experts to talk about the cave.
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