With Winter in Eden ending as it did, what
the third and final book in the Eden series, Return to Eden (1988), would hold in store was a major question
mark. If something resembling an
understanding had been established between the humans and yilane, what could
drive the Eden storyline further? Turns
out, a lot.
Kerrick,
having bartered a relative peace between the yilane and humans, looks to
re-settle with his wife Armun and the rest of the tanu in a new community. They do so beside a bountiful lake, but not
without a moment of intense drama for the two male yilane who travel with them.
Leading to other major events, life is
far from settled for the tanu. Ambalasi,
still de facto leader of the
Daughters of Life, has her traditional mindset put to the test by Enge and one
of the strong-willed Daughters, and in the process their whole community is
tested. And Vainte, exiled to a foreign
continent, contemplates her future, and eventually comes to a conclusion—a
predictable but effective conclusion.
Where
Winter in Eden expanded the settings
and characters of West of Eden, so
too does Return to Eden. But what is expanded, or at least concretized
most significantly is theme—or rather themes, as there are many floating around
Harrison’s extreme alternate history.
From race/species relations to the role of weapons, perennial philosophy
to Otherness, linguistics to culture—all arrive at a relative sense of closure
given the points causing tension thus far in the series. The number of times I thought to myself “Wow, that ties back into that, and that…” is
a significant indication of the preparation and organization Harrison brought
to the series.
If
Harrison were alive, however, what I would really clap him on the back for is
not ending the series on a utopian note.
Despite having every chance to follow in the footsteps of countless
books before—that happiest of most tragic of endings—he chooses another
direction. Eden acknowledging the
problems humans, no matter pre-historic or contemporary, face, Harrison comes
to a middle-ground conclusion—a practical view to what’s plaguing us here and
now—those oh so important steps before social harmony.
Point
blank: Return to Eden is the best of
the series. (Don’t believe this
guy; in terms of plot, he’s partially correct. But in terms of concepts, theme, sub-text,
etc., Return is where everything
solidifies in Eden.) It goes without
saying if you’ve read this far, you’ll want to continue, and if you haven’t
paid attention to some of the underlying motivations and sub-textual points
under examination, go back and read the first two again. In terms of
storytelling, usage of character, plotting, and deployment of ideas, Return is as good as the prior
books. Where the final book pokes its
head higher is in its braiding of the threads of theme introduced thus
far. Bringing everything (loosely)
together, the final interaction of yilane, oustuzu, Vainte, Kerrick and
everything else Harrison has introduced the reader to defines the final vision
of Eden. Soft science fiction with a
practical view toward holism, where many other books propagate unrealistic
utopian ideals, Return to Eden
acknowledges asymmetries while tweaking a few of the more significant ones to
look in the direction of something more unified yet flexible. I don’t know if this makes the Eden series
Harrison’s magnum opus, but it certainly makes an excellent argument for it.
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