Young salesman Edward Turnbull has the meeting of a lifetime
while on the road one day. Attempting to cash in on the trend for motor cars,
he peddles goggles for the Sunday driver, and in doing so meets the lovely Miss
Emily Fitzgibbons at an inn. The young
lady’s overseer ensuring the two spend as little time together as possible, a
spark is nevertheless lit, and upon his return to London Edward receives an
invitation to visit Emily at the estate of her uncle, a rich, eccentric
inventor. Over drinks, the young couple
decide to test out his time machine to see a few years into the future. The blind twist of a knob here and an
accidental kick to an instrument there, and the two are winging their way
through space and time to ends unknown.
Awaking in a strange place with red weeds and a strange, pallid coldness
to the air, it takes the two some time to figure out where, in fact, those ends
are. It takes them even longer, a fact
supported by the capture, enslavement, wars, and otherwise inadvertent detours
the two are put through, to even consider getting back to turn of the 20th
century England. And when they do, well,
it’s nothing like they left it.
Part The Time Machine
and part The War of the Worlds, The Space Machine is clear homage to
H.G. Wells. Priest using many of the
ideas and elements from those two novels, Edward and Emily have off-planet
adventures in dramatic style—Wells himself appearing as a key character. Priest writing in period style, I daresay he
even one-ups the grandfather of British sf for precision and accuracy in
telling of their dramatic voyage.
Light on theme compared to the average Priest novel (or even
Wells’ source material, for that matter), The
Space Machine takes Wells’ character as its substance more than any social
or political cause. There are brief
looks at sexual and women’s emancipation circa the end of the 19th century, environmental
warnings, and power and class (the latter of which may be more plot parallel to
The Time Machine than examined
subject matter). But as a whole, the novel’s
subtitle A Scientific Romance seems
to sum up the proceedings best, the inquisitive, innovative nature of Wells’
personality the heart.
As such, The Space
Machine is the novel that would seem most likely to be a mainstream hit for
Priest. Ironically, however, it is one of his least known novels. Stephen Baxter’s bloated, convoluted The Time Ships, purported sequel to
Wells’ The Time Machine, for example,
has garnered more attention despite the gap in quality. (I’m likewise scared of Baxter’s 2016 sequel
to The War of the Worlds entitled The Massacre of Mankind…) Significantly more reminiscent of Brian
Aldiss’ homage to Wells in “The Saliva Tree”, The Space Machine comes recommended to readers looking for more
fiction in Wells’ worlds, but fiction that pays his creations respect in
comparable style.
I have read complaints that
The Space Machine “would have been a more satisfying book had
the author modernised the science fiction elements, but kept the authentic
period writing style”. I would
strongly disagree. I found Priest’s “retro”
technology and society highly complementary to the style of writing. Reading of cyberpunk or hard sf adventures in
Victorian prose, for example, may be a viable product, but I don’t think it
would feel as holistic or be as much an homage had Priest done differently. But more importantly, the novel’s conlusion
wouldn’t have made any sense, making me wonder if Lupoff read the same book. And the comment that Priest starts the novel
too slow is downright laughable. Only
somebody steeped in pulp sf would make such a comment. Chapters come swiftly and it only takes a
couple before Edward and Emily have landed in unfamiliar surrounds, their exotic
adventure in full swing. From another view,
the halfway point of the novel forms the climax of many other novels, Priest
packing a lot of story into 350+ pages.
In the end, The Space
Machine is a wonderful homage to H.G. Wells that effortlessly combines
elements of The Time Machine and The War of the Worlds into a synergistic
whole that likewise emulates the style and cultural perspective of the
times. Ironically, the most overtly
genre novel Prist has written (that is, if we ignore his movie tie-in work),
the story moves at a quick clip and features that sf sense of wonder (i.e.
adventure in exotic lands, with aliens and battles) that many readers are
looking for.
Great to see you reading another Priest. After reading the impressive The Prestige, I have lined up a couple more Priest for this year.
ReplyDeleteThe year is almost done! Get reading! :)
DeleteHa, I'm counting on some uninterrupted time over the holidays for a reading sprint. Can't think of a better way to end the year. I've also just discovered Pratchett, into my 3rd. Never enough time for everything.
ReplyDelete