Ahh,
the English summer holiday. Time at the cottage, playing under the
sun, taking the boat for a sail or two, watching for ice-devils—wait,
what? Ice-devils? Is that British humor referring to the sea? But
what about the lox? And the lorin—the hairy people? I thought
everything seemed so familiar, now it doesn’t... Such is the alien
strangeness of Michael Coney’s Hello Summer,
Goodbye (1975). The internal conflicts it
describes, unfortunately, are not…
At
the outset of Hello Summer, Goodbye,
Alika Drove seems like any other teenage boy getting ready to go on
summer holiday with his parents. His mother frets over packing bags,
just as his father grooms the family car readying it for the trip.
Trying to stay out from underfoot, Drove argues with his parents
about what he can and cannot bring on holiday, and whether or not he
can meet up with a girl he had eyes for the previous summer,
Brown-eyes, an innkeeper’s daughter who his parents look down upon
for being lower class. Despite his father’s tight, prudish control
over Drove’s behavior, the teen finds a big surprise upon arrival
at the tourist island of Pallahaxi: his own skimmer boat. Thus, the
summer holiday proves to be filled with adventure, romance, and drama
where the water is your friend as much as foe (those ice-devils).
It’s the intentions of the adults around you, however, that may not
be as they appear.