Marcel
Theroux’s first overtly science fiction novel Far North
received a bit of attention in 2009 when it was released.
Post-apocalyptic fiction missing that special something to make the
whole a tight, cohesive package, it nevertheless gave hope of greater
things to come given the human focus. The follow up, 2013’s
Strange Bodies, embodies the hope—and more.
Nicholas
Slopen is an uptight British academic whose life and work is focused
on the poet Samuel Johnson. Salary and family spurned for time in
dusty libraries and conservatories poring over old letters and
manuscripts, when he receives an offer from a rich celebrity to
verify the authenticity of a collection of Johnson letters, he jumps
at the chance. Saliva forming in his mouth hearing that some of the
letters may never before have been published, Slopen becomes hopeful,
that is, until the actual examination. Though appearing to be
written in Johnson’s hand, the details of the letters don’t seem
to stack up—including the backstory of the shady Soviet man seeking
to sell the papers. Slopen’s life—lives, in fact—going down an
entirely unintended road thereafter, academia may have to wait.
Strange
Bodies is one of those novels so perfectly crafted that it is
able to reveal its central conceit in the prologue and yet still
build an absolutely intriguing mystery in the subsequent pages. The
narrative split into oscillating parts, one recounts Slopen’s
earlier life as an academic, and the second his life in a new body in
an insane asylum. The journey from A to B the mystery Theroux
creates so effortlessly, at purely the level of enjoyment, Strange
Bodies eminently succeeds.
And
there is firm, rootable substance beneath. From the historical
details of Johnson’s life to Slopen’s life as an academic, the
technological/philological manner in which humans acquire life in new
bodies to the existential quandaries and problems this produces, all
is filtered through Slopen’s very human, very relatable viewpoint.
His questions are the reader’s questions, just as much as his fears
are theirs, also. Transforming Slopen, the changes he experiences
are re-threaded throughout his ongoing situations and decisions,
grounding the novel in elements that transcends his character.
Fascinating
about this is that Nicholas Slopen is not ostensibly a likeable
character. Waspish in thought and dry in interaction, he does not
readily warm to the reader, not to mention his bookish, academic ways
lead to nasty “surprises” in his life we but not he see coming.
And yet the reader is compelled to continue reading his story. The
circumstances Slopen finds himself in stretching reality the tiniest
degrees at a time, his innate curiosity to learn the truth behind it
is likewise the reader’s, and thus, as uncomfortable bedfellows as
you may be, there is a journey of discovery together. Capping this
is that Theroux gently increases the heat on the burner with the turn
of pages, meaning readers are unknowingly boiled like frogs upon the
conclusion of the novel. The opinion of Slopen at the outset is not
the same as the end, such is the subtly of transition in perspective.
(I would argue this too feeds into the novel’s overarching ideas
regarding autonomy and technology).
And
something must be said of Theroux’s prose. An immense difference
to Far North, it’s as if two different writers wrote the
novels, such is the degree of focus and accuracy appearing in Strange
Bodies. The story premise may be reminiscent of something by Tim
Powers, but the prose is certainly more like Christopher Priest’s—the
exactitude amazing. Each word seeming to click perfectly into place
like a puzzle piece, part of the joy of the novel is experiencing the
steady appearance of salient, precise text.
Strange
Bodies garnered a bit of recognition upon its release in 2013,
but I think it’s fair to say has received little since. It’s a
shame. A sharp, able, human piece of fiction that incorporates
speculative elements in a fashion that does not embarrass the adult
reader given the broader erudition deployed regarding literature and
philology, not to mention indirect discussion regarding
existentialism and human autonomy, Theroux proves that he can delve
into the world of science fiction with the best. For fans of
Christopher Priest and intelligent, well-written science fiction in
general, this is a novel well worth seeking out.
No comments:
Post a Comment