John DeNardo on SF Signal decries Algis Budrys' 1960 Rogue
Moon for its character development and focus on existentialism, opining
that “too much of the book centers on the
characters of Hawks, Barker, Claire,, and Vincent Connington. While their
stories are somewhat interesting, I really wanted to see more of the BDO.” It’s precisely superficial attitudes like
this which have kept much of sf in the gutter, my friends. Gimme
cool death machines rather than exploration of human nature… Yeah. But I get ahead of myself.
From
its title to the central plot device, Rogue Moon is an enigma. Is
it satire on the American system and what it demands of a person before they
die? A meditation on death from
the point of view of numerous character types?
Allegory to the subjectivity of existence and the variety of responses
to that notion? Or just an obtuse idea,
presented as conceived, without deeper significance?
Possessing
something of the vivacity of Alfred Bester, the maddening enigma of Rogue Moon centers around a strange
artifact discovered on the moon, and the death and psychosis it deals to anyone
who enters it. Dr. Edward Hawks,
employee of the US Navy, has been tasked with getting to the bottom of the
mystery, and after numerous sailors succumb to the labyrinth, is forced to
expand his search for a person with the right mindset to deal with the stress
and threat the artifact wields. The
daredevil Al Barker coming available, Hawks must deal with a flirtatious
girlfriend and a private businessman before recruiting the devil-may-care
stuntman. Personalities warring above
and below the surface, the men’s innermost demons must be exorcised before
getting to the heart of the alien device.
Heavily
focused on character and character interaction, it’s natural that the average
genre fan who reads Rogue Moon’s back
cover blurb and its promises of excitement via the labyrinthian lunar killing
machine will be disappointed once they actually get through the text. Socially realist rather than squids in space,
Budrys’ agenda is not lurid entertainment.
Like Robert Sheckley, he deploys the devices of conventional genre
toward a humanist agenda—at least, apparently.
The
main preoccupation of Rogue Moon would
seem to be mortality (though how the title fits this I’ve yet to imagine). Hawks and Parker’s differing mindsets the
focus, secondary characters nevertheless also weigh in on the alien device and
its ultimate meaning. A jostling of
personalities ensuing, entering the labyrinth is when the rubber hits the
proverbial road, forcing a deeper reaction from those who enter, and what some
might argue, a true representation of their personality. Ballardian before Ballard, Rogue Moon is a dense book with more
than one unexplained element digging at the human psyche.
While
interaction among the characters is occasionally a tad overdone (the dueling
quotes from classics, for example), it’s possible, given the extended reality
of the plot premise and other aspects, this was intentional. Budrys' other books show more reserved,
natural dialogue, indicating he knew what he was doing. This sense of ‘overdone’ is heightened by the
fact all of the characters occupy stereotypical roles: the macho man, the
booming Texas businessman, the glamour queen, the plain Jane, What then, was
the purpose of the tone? Again, enigma.
While
later films, like Saw and Cube, would turn the mysterious death
machine into big-dollar entertainment, Budrys keeps the concept
human-centric. Rogue Moon, by focusing its attention on the characters rather than
plot devices, delivers a story which hovers in and around many significant
topics, including mortality, personality strengths and weaknesses, and
existentialism. Thought and emotion at
the forefront, more time is spent discussing the meaning of the artifact than
describing the grisly horrors it visits upon its victims, and thus will be a
disappointment for readers looking for cheap thrills. Which leads back to the beginning of this review....
It's been many years since I read this one. Maybe it's time for a revisit. Recently I read some Budrys shorts, 'Nobody Bothers Gus' and 'The End of Summer', both excellent and philosophically ruminative. I vaguely remember thinking that Rogue Moon got the balance wrong, jamming in the BDO "action" in the last few pages (am I wrong...?) but I still think of this novel years after unlike lesser works. Not one of my all time faves but definitely worth reading.
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