This
is speculative fiction and Ms. Lord is a West Indies author. Moreover,
she doesn't shrink from the notion that TBOAPW is Caribbean speculative
fiction. My experience is short in this area, so first I'll remark that the dialogue and prose all sounded natural to my North America–tuned
ear. The differences between this and, say, Ray Bradbury are more subtle
than written-out dialect, which this book does not use. Regardless
of any regional differences, the book propelled this reader effortlessly from page to
page and chapter to chapter. I found myself re-reading certain sections
only to be sure I didn't miss a thing.
In fact, the language differences between
the characters are as notable as the distance between usage in TBOAPW
and, say, Ursula K. LeGuin or Octavia Butler. Chapters written from the
point of view of Dllenahkh, the male protagonist, are written in the
third person in an elevated, learned style close to the character of
Dllenahkh himself. Chapters from the point of view of Grace Delarua, the
female protagonist and primary focus, are in first person and a much
more casual style, sometimes even pleading with readers for patience
or indulgence and addressing us as "you" (as though the novel is the
very memoir we see Delarua writing in the last scene).
The
book reveals its West Indies bloodline just as brightly in its physical
descriptions and themes, with undercurrents of race and colonialism
running very near the surface. The Sadiri, putative superior race (at
least they seem to think so), fit the book's galactic human norm with
"eyes, hair, and skin all somewhere on the spectrum of brown," but they
also boast iridescent hair and mental abilities which set them apart.
Before we reach the end the book exposes, pricks, and ultimately
deflates the "superiority" of the Sadiri in spite of their position of
privilege. Even the Caretakers, a shadowy race with near-godlike powers, reveal
themselves near the end to be advanced humans from the future rather than angels or
demons. (I think.)
In broadest outline the book is a tour of cultures (think Gulliver's Travels in
a universe by Frank Herbert) powered by two big plot engines: Pushing
us forward from the front of the book is a planetwide tragedy which may
turn out to be genocide—or at least grossly negligent slaughter. Pulling
us onward toward the back of the book is the unfolding of a
cross-culture, May-September romance. Our energetic, first-person
heroine Delarua eventually finds love with the more mature (previously
married) third-person hero Dllenahkh. In spite of the baggage that comes
from emotional abuse (Delarua's) or infidelity and loss (Dllenahkh's),
the wheels of love turn slowly but still sure.
Where
does this book fit in the classic SF tradition? For me, this book has
some of the humanist touch of Ray Bradbury, perhaps without the same
suspicion of technology. It probes the intersection of personal life and
politics or careers in a way which reminded me of Ursula K. LeGuin. It
draws vivid pictures of human cultures with features both foreign and
familiar—this reminded me of Frank Herbert, albeit sketched more briefly and with fewer brushstrokes. Speaking of few brushstrokes, it hits its marks with the bracing leanness of
the best of Arthur C. Clarke, though Lord's characters are fuller and more personable. Finally, the book takes on social structures, gender, and even
super races, attracting comparison with another of my favorites, Octavia
Butler.
As in all the best SF, the social commentary here takes a back seat to the personalities and the vivid scenes they inhabit. In The Best of All Possible Worlds, readers of Ray Bradbury, Ursula LeGuin, and Octavia Butler can expect to be drawn into a fast-moving story: eye-catching scenery, likeable characters, engrossing questions, and satisfying—if open-ended—conclusions.
As in all the best SF, the social commentary here takes a back seat to the personalities and the vivid scenes they inhabit. In The Best of All Possible Worlds, readers of Ray Bradbury, Ursula LeGuin, and Octavia Butler can expect to be drawn into a fast-moving story: eye-catching scenery, likeable characters, engrossing questions, and satisfying—if open-ended—conclusions.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for commenting at MadProfessah.com! Your input will (probably) appear on the blog after being reviewed.