I am a big fan of the movie
Arrival about the efforts by humanity to decode the language of aliens who arrive on Earth (in the story they are on ships in orbit, in the film they hover above the ground in giant ships).
Arrival was based on the title story of this collection of short-stories by American author Ted Chiang. After finishing the book- the audiobook- I was surprised to learn that this collection was published way back in 2002. Science fiction sometimes ages poorly, particularly short-stories which may become outdated with rapid changes in technology. That was not the case here- all of these stories hold up, particularly
Tower of Babylon, his first story, which is a take on the Biblical tale and
Seventy-Two Letters, which draws on Victorian technology and Kabbalah. Like many authors working in this genre, Chiang is strong on ideas and less strong on the mechanics of fiction, with stories that feature lengthy exposition, inner monologues and extremely limited casts of characters, but the ideas are so strong that they overcome any weaknesses. Sad I didn't read this collection decades ago.
Published 7/31/24
Pink Slime (2024)
by Fernanda Trias
I confused Uruguayan author Fernanda Trias with Fernanda Melchor (Mexican), but I read Pink Slime because it is another excellent example of the wave of speculative/realist fiction emerging out of Latin America. I could name a half dozen books just from my blog- Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez (Argentina), is one of my favorite books of this decade. Nineteen Claws and a Black Bird (2023) by Agustina Bazterrica, who also wrote Tender is the Flesh, one of my favorite books from 2019. There is You Glow in the Dark (2024)by Liliana Colanzi, and I'm sure, others that I've missed. These books exist alongside their non-speculative counterparts- authors like the aforementioned Melchor, and Brazilian Ana Paula Maia.
I was so anxious to read Pink Slime that I read it on my phone, on the native reader for the Libby library app, which was a major sacrifice. Pink Slime takes place in an unnamed Latin American or possibly Southern European nation- there is a coast line, towns further inland and geographic features of the city that evoke specific cities- la rambla (Barcelona) and barrio alta (Lisbon) but appear to be used generically here. The narrator and protagonist is unnamed, working as a caretaker for Mauro who has the syndrome where he never feels full from eating and is essentially constantly hungry. Mauro's wealthy parents are absent for a reason unexplained, and the narrator is housebound as the coastal city is beset by a killing red wind that flays humans alive after infection. Respite comes in the form of a thick, bad smelling fog that allows transit around the increasingly deserted city. Food, the pink slime of the title, comes from a chicken processing plant, newly constructed amid dwindling food supplies.
Pink Slime is a novel of pre-apocalyptic survival and I found it compelling, worth picking up from the library for sure.
Published 8/6/24
Audiobook Review
Exhalation (2019)
by Ted Chiang
What is crazy about author/intellectual Ted Chiang is that he has 125 reference in the New York Times data set and none of them are a full-length book review of Exhalation, his 2019 short-story collection. Only five years later he's been hailed as a genius-level thinker about the potential impacts of AI on our society. I believe Chiang's real break-through outside the science-fiction community was the success of Arrival, based on a short story from his first collection. Arrival hit theaters in 2016, so that makes it doubly surprising that Exhalation didn't rate a full New York Times book review.
You'd have to chalk it up to the double prejudice against genre fiction and short stories. It's interesting to me that Chiang is known as an AI expert, because I think his most interesting stories are the ones that deal with religion. In this collection Omphalos- which won a Locus Award in 2020- is a good example. Omphalos takes place in a world where "young earth creationism" was proved true and accepted as scientific fact in a world that is otherwise similar to ours. Basing science fiction stories on religious concepts or themes is a particularly interesting approach to science fiction- and you could almost call it a different genre, one I think that Chiang may have invented? I certainly can't think of another example- maybe Chabon's alt-history The Secret Yiddish Police-Man's Union. But the AI stuff is good too- in this collection The Lifecycle of Software Objects was a particularly interesting take on the after life of digitally created "pets." That story caused me to think more about AI then I have in months.
Published 8/8/24
Audiobook Review
The Book of Elsewhere (2024)
by Keanu Reeves and China Mieville
Back in 2021 Reeves launched his personal IP project of BRZRKR or "beserker"- a comic book series about a deathless eternal warrior who is 77 thousand years old. I like Reeves well enough, but I haven't been a regular reader of comic books since high school and the logline didn't sound particularly inventive. Then, last month, The Book of Elsewhere was released as a "Keanu Reeves novel actually written by China Mieville." That description caught my eye, as did several reviews which came to the conclusion that The Book of Elsewhere was way more interesting than one would expect.
English author Chine Mieville has been on my radar for years but I haven't really honed in on him, maybe because this is his first novel in twelve years, or maybe it's because he has been categorized as a writer of fantasy instead of being properly categorized as a writer who bridges fantasy/science fiction/social science literature. If I'd know what he was actually about I would have read through his bibliography years ago. Based on The Book of Elsewhere, I immediately went to start with his back catalog. \
Somewhat confusingly, The Book of Elsewhere is described as taking place in an "alternate universe" of the BRZRKR comic, which suggests it's non-canon, but since canon is a twelve issue comic book about an immortal warrior who is also sad, my sense is that the alternate universe conceit isn't important. The set up is that B or UNrat- who you have to imagine as Keanu Reeves, exists in the present day as a "super soldier" for the US government. He goes out on Black-ops, where due to the vagaries of his bezerker state, he sometimes kills both friend and foe indiscriminately. When he comes out of his fugue state he is often sad about what he has done. He is also sad about being unable to die. Part of the back story here is that human civilization is actually tens of thousands of years old, and we just haven't found out about the part that came before ancient Mesopotamia.
The book shifts between the present and the past. Besides the main dude, there is the cast of contemporary characters, soldiers he fights with and scientists the government has recruited to study him. There is a similarly eternal pig who has been trying to kill him over and over again for centuries. There is a "life-based" cult who worship the pig and seek to kill B/UNrat- again for millennia.
The main Audiobook narrator is Edoardo Bellerini who is also the Audiobook narrator for the My Struggle series by Knausgaard, which is pretty insane- just writing as someone who listened to the Audiobook for My Struggle. This was actually a killer Audiobook because of the shifting voices back and forth through time. As other reviewers have noted, it is, indeed, way better than it has any right to be. I hope they make a movie/tv show out of this book rather than the comic.
Published 8/13/24
A Visionary Madness (2003)
by Mike Jay
I heard about this book on Instagram, via an account of an academic I follow. Despite widespread acceptance of the idea that the internet makes everything available forever, this simply isn't proving to be the case. A good example is the journalism written during the internet era for outlets like Vice Media or the Gawker blog family. All that stuff is just gone. I've observed this interesting dynamic between the operation of copyright upon the ability of audiences to spread a given work vs. the dynamic of public domain materials which conversely effects the ability of publishers to generate interest in a given work. This dynamic tracks the release cycle for a specific work, with the former dynamic operating at the beginning and the latter taking over after a certain number of years.
I mention that because I'd never heard of The Air Loom Gang before I saw it on instagram. It's a good example of a book that exists as a cult classic, though not a particularly succesful example of that genre. Jay writes about James Tilly, a real person who lived in the UK (with short trips to France) around the time of the French Revolution. He showed up in London after said Revolution and demanded an audience with Lord Liverpool and when he was refused he made public accusations that Liverpool was a traitor to the crown. He claimed he was part of a secret mission to France to broker a peace between the UK and revolutionary France.
At Lord Liverpool's request, he was committed to the then new insinuation of the insane asylum, known as Bedlam where he spent the next couple decades loudly proclaiming his sanity. The book delves into the nature of his madness, which is revealed as the first technologically driven episode of paranoid-schizophrenia. He makes this argument because Tilly claimed to be the victim of a secret influencing machine that was hidden below the streets of London. He sketched the device, which was equally intricate and insane. As Jay makes clear, Tilly was insane, but in a very interesting way. It's a book that deserves to be on any shelf where Discipline and Punishment by Michel Foucault resides but I'm pretty sure finding a hard copy outside a library is rough.
Published 8/15/24
The Hasheesh Eater (1857)
by Fitz Hugh Ludlow
The Hasheesh Eater is generally considered to be the first book that extols the "drug culture" of America. Obviously, it was written decades before such a culture actually existed, and was then revived by writers from the Beat Generation and so forth. To be clear, Ludlow was a fan of "hasheesh" which is a concentrated form of cannabis- not a form of opium. Despite a professional career in the criminal justice system I was still fuzzy on the distinction going in to The Hasheesh Eater. Ludlow's frame of reference is assuredly classical in terms of his subjective experience- the hallucinations and so forth.
The hallucinations he describes sound more like what a modern person what associate with hallucinatory drugs like LSD, magic mushrooms and ayahuasca. He also describes a level of psychological dependence that reads as ridiculous in 2024, more in line with how marijuana was depicted at the height of the War Against Drugs of the 1980's. Even though we now live in a country where marijuana is legal in half the states (and all the important states) in America it is still hard to imagine the state of American society BEFORE marijuana prohibition- when marijuana was legal, as was cocaine and opium.
Published 8/19/24
On Such a Full Sea (2014)
by Chang Rae Lee
I read Native Speaker, Chang-Rae Lee's 1994 debut as part of the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America list, where it is part of the New York/Manhattan chapter. I enjoyed Native Speaker, so when I saw he had written a dystopian-fiction/literary fiction cross-over book a decade ago, I checked out the B.D. Wong narrated Audiobook from the library. I enjoyed the listening experience and I guess I would call On Such a Full Sea an interesting failure- again my own feelings were echoed by the contemporaneous review in the New York Times, by now Pulitzer Prize winning author Andrew Sean Greer. I actually wanted to quote his paragraph of the state of dystopian sci-fi, literary-fiction cross over circa 2014:
Colson Whitehead, Cormac McCarthy and Margaret Atwood (in her recently concluded MaddAddam trilogy) have all tackled this genre. Doris Lessing’s “Mara and Dann” is a classic, as is Anthony Burgess’s “Clockwork Orange.” Further back in time, one has only to think of Orwell, Huxley and Wells, even Jack London and Mary Shelley. -New York Times(paywall)
Amazing that Greer would single out the MaddAddam trilogy at the expense of The Handmaid's Tale, but otherwise that's a good summary. I think you'd have to put Kazuo Ishiguro in there in 2024, but besides those two things.
If I had to focus on one reason On Such a Full Sea wasn't a hit, it would be the choice of the author to use a collective second person tense to narrate- as in the, story is told from the collective perspective of the citizens of B-more, a post collapse Chinese colony occupying the ruins of Baltimore. The protagonist is Fan, daughter of B-more and a "tank diver"- someone tasked with maintaining the aqua-culture tanks that Bmore uses to cultivate fish which they then sell to the "Charters"- enclaves of wealthy post-Americans who exist largely cut off from both colonies like Bmore and the unorganized "counties"- which is a mild take on the Mad Max/The Road idea of society in the aftermath of a total collapse of government.
Fan's adventures start out after she leaves Bmore in search of her disappeared boyfriend, whose child she is carrying. Because of the second person narrator, we never get inside Fan's head and her twin desires- to find her boyfriend hopefully via her brother, one of the few colonists who have been elevated to charter life, never separate out. Time is a little imprecise because of Fan's adventures, but there is no denying that at the beginning of the book she knows she is pregnant, and by the end she is still pregnant and not one person has noticed, so we're talking a couple months tops.
But I thought the world building was interesting, and Lee is a no-doubt writer of literary fiction, so the overall quality level of the prose was very high. Not a book I would go around recommending, but I personally enjoyed the Audiobook experience.
Published 8/21/24
Brat (2024)
by Gabriel Smith
I've run into people who join multiple libraries so they can get popular books faster, on the theory that people living in dipshit Arkansas aren't going to be interested in the latest- not sure if that actually works or not, but I think about every time I have to wait three months for the latest work of hot literary fiction. Such was the case with Brat by English author Gabriel Smith, which had the good fortune to be released at essentially the same time as the Charli XCX record of the same name. He even faked an email which purported to say that Charli XCX named Brat after the novel, but that has been debunked. Still, google this book and the first 10 returns on Google all mention the serendipity of sharing a title with THE album of the summer.
The numbers haven't been great in the US- I imagine they are better in the UK. Gabriel, who I surmise is the titular Brat- though the only reference is to a shirt his ex-girlfriend owned that had brat written across the front- is a writer, in his 20's. He owes his publisher a novel, his Dad just died and his brother and sister in law want/need him to clean up the house for sale in the aftermath of Dad's death, Mom being in the later stages of dementia and confined to a home.
Gabriel is grief-stricken, handling everything badly, and to make matters worse, large sheets of his skin are peeling off. It sounds grosser than it actually is: the skin peels away to reveal...more skin. Gabriel haphazardly tries to figure out what is going on with his skin while he deals with a couple of neighbor teens with bad attitudes, a frightening deer-man who may or may not be stalking him with grievous intent, and his bitch sister-in-law. There's also his Dad's marijuana grow in the attic to attend to, manuscripts and video tapes that change their content with every reading/viewing, black mold and a collapsing roof.
In the end there is plenty of atmosphere but only the loosest outline of a plot. Smith is not concerned with a cohesive narrative, plainly. It's a fun, hipster-type read and enough to keep interested in his next book, which is hopefully neither a short-story collection nor a memoir, but not a fantastic book.
Published 8/22/24
Beautiful Days (2024)
by Zach Williams
Beautiful Days is the debut short-story collection by American author Zach Williams. I checked out the Audiobook from the library after reading the
New York Times review earlier this month referred to him as a "genuine young talent...who deftly palpates the dark areas of human psyche." while at the same time making many of the same points I've made here about the difficulty of writing about short-story collections. My favorite was "Ghost Image" about a divorced dad type slouching towards the end of the world at Disneyworld type resort. I also liked "Wood Sorrel House," a riff on the Groundhog Day theme featuring a terrifying infant toddler and some fine descriptive work. The Audiobook I read was well done- most of the stories (all?) feature a narrator/protagonist type with a single point of view expressed in each story, which makes for a good listening experience. I wouldn't exactly recommend
Beautiful Days to all and sundry, but if you are someone who likes short stories and edgy milieus then Zach Williams is going to be your guy!
Published 8/26/24
Daughters of Shandong (2024)
by Eve J. Chung
A recent publishing trend I do appreciate are these historical novels that tell grandmothers/grandfathers story. It's an approach that gives an Auto-fictional vibe to work that otherwise might be construed as genre historical fiction. It's also great to see American authors who write books like this one instead of starting off with a bildungsroman about a character that resembles the author. As a best-seller, it's fantastic and more power to it. It's not particularly sophisticated beyond the concept itself- taking Grandma's origin story and turning it into a compelling work of historical fiction. The experience itself: the wife of a wealthy local landowner is left behind with her two "worthless" daughters when the Communist's come to town, she plots her escape out of the nascent Chinese Communist state, is very interesting.
As the author points out in her Afterword, in which she makes the "grandma's origin story" plot clear, she also points out that the major players in post-Communist victory China: The Chinese Communist Party, the British, who governed Hong Kong and the Nationalist Government of Taiwan, all had their own reasons to keep the refuge misery caused by the Communist victory quiet. You can add to that the United States, which was fighting the Korean War nearby, thus it truly isn't well documented or well understood.
I can forgive Chung her concessions to appealing to a broad, YA level audience. One point that Chung does not soften is the ingrained sexism/prejudice against daughters in Chinese civilization. It's not exactly something one can point out in polite society but it comes up all the time- Chinese families face a lot of pressure to produce a male heir and are daughters produced BEFORE sons are considered bad luck and worthless. Not something I learned about from Daughters of Shangdong but it's rare to see a work of fiction that centers this practice so squarely in the narrative. That's also either the greatest strength and or weakness- Chung's plucky grandma-as-a-girl narrator sees the world through the eyes of a strong American feminist circa 2020 alternately acknowledging subservience to and criticisms of the strong tradition of deference to elders in Chinese culture. Surely a "historically accurate" narrator would not have such a sophisticated critique.