I suppose it’s
possible to apply the term hey-day, though I would waffle on whether
such a relatively positive word can be attached to the glut of books
and stories discharging itself from the guts of humanity these days.
Indeed, explosion seems a more fitting term describing the
unprecedented quantity of fiction available as 2018 turns into 2019.
Humanity has never before experienced such a deluge, which means
there are going to be too many titles desirable to read yet not
enough time. Nevertheless, I will attempt to outline the books I
know are coming in 2019 which strike interest of some sort, starting
with the many risky books planned.
I believe Margaret
Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale
has entered society’s mindset of being among the tip-top dystopias
ever published. Alongside Nineteen
Eighty-four, We,
and Brave New World,
it has become one of the defining bleak thought experiments of the
20th century. With 2019’s The
Testament, Atwood will attempt to
continue Offred’s tale after the events of A
Handmaid’s Tale. Will it be as good,
or at least be complementary in quality fashion, one can only hope
Atwood thought to publish a sequel after having a knock out idea.
Michael Swanwick’s The Iron Dragon’s
Daughter and The
Dragons of Babel form a wonderful,
complementary pair. The former the story of young woman trying to
find herself in an existence twisted by Swanwick’s quasi-fantasy,
quasi-magic-realist pen, and the second the tale of a young man
undergoing his own journey of self-discovery through an equally
dynamic and colorful setting, it remains to be seen what the upcoming
The Iron Dragon’s Mother
can add to the pair, or at least the former. Threatening to split up
the highly complementary nature of the pair (no husband likes to have
an interfering mother-in-law, natch), one can at least hope Swanwick
brings to the game an equally prodigious bit of imagination. The
third risky book on my list is Tim Powers’ More
Walls Broken. Powers seeming to have
lost the mojo for the unique ideas he had at the beginning of this
career and fallen back on allowing quality prose to propel relatively
conventional stories, More Walls Broken
doesn’t seem to want to break the trend. About a group of
scientists who enter a graveyard to raise the dead, stereotype flags
are waving high, and only reading the story will tell whether they
are worth heeding.