John Crowley has long been one of the most contentious names
in fantasy literature. While lauded by
critics and erudite readers, his popularity remains minimal in the
mainstream. And the reasons are
clear. Steering wide of melodrama,
stereotype, contrived plots, and other familiar elements of popular fiction,
Crowley has always utilized distant prose to grapple with abstract albeit human
ideas. Little, Big, Aegypt, and
other such novels utilized elements of genre (faires, alternate history, etc.)
in setting and plot, but focused their content on the value of stories, memory,
and other such broad themes. In 2017,
however, Crowley set out to write a more accessible novel, Ka: Dar Oakley and the Ruin of Ymr being the result. Thankfully, Crowley did not stray far from
his roots.
Ka is foremost a
frame story—or at least a story that begins in media res. An unnamed
elderly man finds Dar Oakley the crow in his backyard one day. In poor health, the bird starts to relate his
life story to the old man. And it’s an
amazing story. Dar Oakley, or as he was
originally known, Dar Oak of Lee, was born into a murder in the woods of primeval
Wales. Befriending a young native girl
named Fox Cap, he watches as the girl grows up to become something of a shaman
among her people. Deciding to embark on a
trip to the underworld to bring back a cauldron that will cure the mortality—wars,
illness, old age—plaguing her people, Fox Cap asks Dar Oakley if he wants to go
with her, and he agrees. But things underground
don’t go as planned. Emerging back into
the world, Dar Oakley finds himself caught in a loop of life and death that
persists through the centuries, and, interestingly enough, at a prime viewing
spot to see evolution of mankind through the branches below him.
I have read a few reviews of Ka since finishing the novel, and most seem to center on the idea
of the novel as a meditation on story and storytelling. Inarguably these are key parts of the narrative,
and something that Crowley would even seem to directly highlight on
occasion. But I would argue they are
only a portion of theme. Crows the symbol of death for some cultures or people,
or at least associated with death bz Westerners, it’s only natural that
mortality is also a key theme. Crows
eating meat regardless human or animal, each battle and war among humans
provides the crows a steady diet. Add to
this what Dar Oakley’s witnesses in his own cycle of life and death, and an
interesting perspective on human mortality emerges. Despite the centuries that pass, however, it
should be stated Dar Oakley is never presented as a wise old seer of birds, gravity
in every word he utters. There is no such
commentary, rather, Crowley keeps his black bird quotidian (if such a word can
be applied to crows) in that Dar maintains a simple outlook for life; find
food, maintain safe shelter, find a mate, interact a bit with others, and
that’s it (a remarkable analog to the majority of human lives). By doing so, Crowley allows the reader to
draw their own conclusions on the human penchant for killing and the meaning of
the life cycle we each are given.
And I believe there is still one more key theme to Ka.
Derived from the subtitle (Dar
Oakley and the Ruin of Ymr), it
should be noted ‘Ka’ is the world which crows come from and ‘Ymr’ is the crow
word for Earth. Thus it should be no
surprise the novel’s prologue features a hill of motley humans scavenging a
landfill, even as the elderly man from the frame narrative is dying of an
unnamed ailment. Moreover, Fox Cap’s
primeval world, though as innocent as it is, is never presented as idyllic. And certainly the American Civil War and the
onset of the industrial age, which go ont o form important chapters in the
narrative, are likewise far from ideal. More
than just killers, humans achieve are presented in the wider view as
destroyers, even to the point of the world they occupy. The old man’s ragged situation framing the
novel thus forms an open-close biological/environmental/human/whatever you want
to call it message for the novel as a whole.
John Crowley is not a writer for everyone. Most of his most critically acclaimed work
somewhat distant and obfuscated, a good deal of mainstream readers bounce due
to the relative lack of familiar plot dichotomies and cookie-cutter characters. In this regard, Ka: Dar Oakley and the Ruin of Ymr is Crowley’s most accessible
novel in many years. Surprising even me,
the novel has a number of overtly fantastical moments that provide color to Dar
Oakley’s corvid world as well as lighten and diversify the evolution of events.
Crowley’s prose remains somewhat remote, but in terms of the story attempting
to be told, is fully complementary. In
short, it’s possible Ka could be read
and enjoyed by readers who have disliked Crowley’s middle period of novels (Little Big, Aegypt, etc.) but were more akin to his earlier novels, like Engine Summer, The Deep, etc. Ka is not Watership Down starring crows, but is just as fascinating for
thematic depth. Dar Oakley will live on
in memory after the last page is turned.
"All right," said With the Fox Cap. "You will be Of the Oak by the Lea."
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