If the
exclamation points in the titles are not enough (Make
Room! Make Room! and A
Transatlantic Tunnel, Hurrah!),
then it’s best to note that much of Harry Harrison’s early career
is characterized by gonzo writing. From the cartoonish storytelling
of the Deathworld series to the antics of the Stainless Steel Rat,
Harrison didn’t often delve into the New Wave of science fiction
happening at the same time as his rise to popularity. But his later
years did soften him, including the Eden series, an odd trilogy of
novels set on an Earth where not only did the dinosaurs survive, they
developed sapient intelligence in parallel to humans. Harrison
followed that series up with another major deviation from course, The
Hammer & the Cross trilogy,
co-authored with academic Tom Shippey (credited as John Holm).
Likewise looking historically but rooting itself in more realistic
soil, the series looks the Vikings and Anglo-Saxons in 9th century
England, and the clash for power and religion happening then.
While on
paper a trope (farmboy rises to power), The
Hammer & the Cross (the
eponymous first volume of the trilogy, 1993) has a strong backdrop to
flesh out the familiar story. Set at a time in England when Viking
raids were still happening, the book features Shef, an Anglo-Saxon
blacksmith slave, who finds himself living among Vikings. Religions
at odds as much as cultures, he sees directly the manner in which the
two sides wreak havoc on one another. And he decides to get
something from it.
From the
word ‘go’, The Hammer &
the Cross goes. Harrison and
Shippey keeping the plot pedal to the metal, Shef’s adventures as
blacksmith rarely slow down as he transitions his ‘career’ into
something greater. Battles neither too technical nor overblown, they
have a realistic simplicity that complements the nature of the story
being told while keeping things grounded, not to mention do not allow
the narratie to delve too deeply into the fundamental relationship
between religion and culture. Those matters kept superficial, the
authors leave readers to decide what to make of it.
If there
are any issues with such an approahc, one would certainly be that
pace and tone do not match the seriousness the author’s seem to
want the narrative to be imbued with. Dramatic events occur, but
without the proper staging (i.e. scene-setting is often pushed aside
in favor of maintaining pace), they do not have the proper weight.
The benefit is certainly narrative length (were such details to be
included, the page count would grow by 50%), but compared with
Bernard Cornwell’s Saxon novels, there is a comparative gravitas
lacking that some readers may be looking for in such historical
narratives.
In the
end, The Hammer & the Cross
is not a novel that will set the world on fire, but it is quite
solid, and should be of interest for readers interested in a largely
realistic rendering of Viking and Anglo-Saxon life in 9th century
Europe with a slight alternate history twist. Harrison and Shippey
never letting the details of the world bog their narrative down, the
story moves at a steady clip, tracing lives in a way that balances
pace, action, and realism competently, just not overly seriously.
No comments:
Post a Comment