Alternate
history to the extreme, Harry Harrison’s West of Eden, first in the Eden trilogy, posited a world wherein not all
dinosaurs went extinct. An evolved
bipedal species surviving the Cretaceous and gaining sentience called the
yilane, the novel describes their first major interaction with humanity, and
the war and violence that ensued. More
than just blood and fighting, it is clear Harrison was paving the way for a
larger agenda on species relations, Otherness, war, civilization, and other
major ideas surrounding the concpt of a multi-hued society. In the second of the trilogy, Winter in Eden, those ideas begin to
reveal themselves along clearer lines, even as the tension between the yilane
and humans ratchets itself back up again.
Exploring
new areas of the map, Winter in Eden
likewise expands its points of view.
Just a side character in West of Eden, Winter begins to follow Armun, Kerrick’s wife, as she attempts to
reunite with her husband. Kerrick,
meanwhile, attempts to extract what knowledge and science he can from the ruins
of the yilane city razed at the end of West of Eden. But a stronger calling
eventually draws him away. Though
defeated, Vainte still lives, and in Winter
in Eden her quest to destroy the vile ustouzou
redoubles. Employing means to make
Hitler smile, she’s learned her lesson and aims for a methodical killing
blow. Likewise surviving the catastrophe
is Enge, one of the Daughters of Light.
Her beliefs shunned by most yilane, she strikes out with a small group
to create a new society, and discovers some very interesting aspects of the
world in the process.
The
ball of Winter in Eden takes its time
to start rolling. The war at the end of West of Eden affecting humans and yilane
alike, Harrison resolves its aftermath before sending the characters out into
the world on new arcs. These arcs occur
natural to the overall storyline and add new perspectives and views, in turn
bringing fresh color to the story. There
are sea voyages, new species discovered, and new alliances attempted. What
hasn’t changed is the unique usage of yilane language, pace of storytelling,
and imagination invested by Harrison. Winter is, if anything, a consistent
follow through that makes clear the novels are part of a larger storyline to be
resolved in Return to Eden. Even more interesting, Winter ends, not on a dramatic note, rather one which creates an
intriguing question: what more is there to say in Return to Eden?
In
the end, Winter of Eden is a solid
continuation from West of Eden that
opens wider the doors of Harrison’s larger purpose in presenting such an exotic
alternate history. Religion, technology,
blind prejudice, circles of violence, confronting Other, and a variety of other
fundamental human phenomena begin to show more distinct features through the
seemingly unending aggression between yilane and humans. More areas of the map exposed while
characters gain new knowledge and prominence in the wider narrative, it does
what a sequel should while advancing the ideological pursuit. In other words, readers who enjoyed the first
cannot be anything but satisfied by the second.
For
a more in-depth review of the novel, see MPorcius’ quality take here.
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