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Another Dimension
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July 2015
Title: Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology
Editors: Ann and Jeff VanderMeer
Publisher: PM Press
In their introduction to this excellent compilation of twenty-nine feminist sf/f/h
stories, Ann and Jeff VanderMeer observe that there's "a current renaissance in
feminist speculative fiction," a statement which the stories themselves -- many of
recent vintage -- amply support. The editors further remark that they see this
anthology as "a contribution to an ongoing conversation." Indeed it is that, and
may spark a conversation or two of its own.
Normally, with a table of contents this long, I would single out maybe ten names
and relegate the remainder to "and others." But in this case I feel it's important to
name all the contributors. We have a superlative lineup: L. Timmel Duchamp,
Leonora Carrington, Kit Reed, Nnedi Okorafor, Eleanor Arnason, Kelley
Eskridge, Angélica Gorodischer, Nalo Hopkinson, Leena Krohn, James Tiptree,
Jr., Rose Lemberg, Octavia E. Butler, Anne Richter, Kelly Barnhill, Hiromi Goto,
Angela Carter, Pat Murphy, Joanna Russ, Vandana Singh, Susan Palwick, Carol
Emshwiller, Eileen Gunn, Tanith Lee, Karin Tidbeck, Ursula K. Le Guin, Pamela
Sargent, Rachel Swirsky, Catherynne M. Valente, Élisa Vonarburg. Tonally, many
of these stories sizzle with anger and dip into despair: more than one features body
horror and gruesome physical transformations, or violent and volatile emotional
landscapes. I'll admit that as I started turning the pages I braced myself for
provocation, for narratives that would bash my brain and hatchet my heart. I
shouldn't have bothered putting up a fight. A dozen pages in I'd been wrestled to
the ground. So be it. If fiction provides empathy, and empathy is a recommended
staple of one's emotional diet, consider this anthology a mega-dose of literary
vitamins.
Aesthetically, we encounter outright bizarreness (Carrington's "My Flannel
Knickers"), allegorical fantasy (Arnason's "The Grammarian's Five Daughters"),
sword-and-sorcery (Lee's "Northern Chess"), mythical realism (Okorafor's "The
Palm Tree Bandit"), historical realism (Le Guin's "Sur," Carter's "The Fall River
Axe Murders"), "classic" extrapolative what-ifs (Butler's "The Evening and the
Morning and the Night," Russ' "When It Changed"), sf horror and apocalypse
(Tiptree, Jr.'s "The Screwfly Solution," Murphy's "Love and Sex Among the
Invertebrates"), parodic absurdism (Gunn's "Stable Strategies for Middle
Management"), supernatural horror (Hopkinson's "The Glass Bottle Trick"),
surrealism (Richter's "The Sleep of Plants," Singh's "The Woman Who Thought
She Was a Planet"), and all sorts of other experimentations, like the brilliant
melding of poetic cosmogony and intimate realization in Valente's "Thirteen
Ways of Looking at Space/Time" or the pitch-perfect, second-person haunting of
Swirsky's "Detours on the Way to Nothing." Of course, all these reductive labels
are ultimately silly, because these idiosyncratic tales resist categorization. In fact,
resistance -- whether stoic or raging -- is a good word to describe whatever mode
of abstract literary kinship these stories might share. The VanderMeers are to be
commended not only for their editorial selections but for the sequence into which
they've arranged them. With two exceptions I read the stories in the order
presented, and the journey was full of welcome contrasts and variations.
I hope that this anthology is read by many and goes into multiple printings. (If so,
perhaps the galleys can be re-proofed. There's at least one incorrect publication
date, several spelling mistakes, and the sporadic typographical upheaval. Also,
Octavia Butler's story is followed by an author's afterword, which is interesting
but jarring). For a rich discussion of feminist sf/f in the 1970s, a fertile and
innovative period for sf at large, I recommend "Female Counter-Literature:
Feminism," the tenth chapter in Andrew M. Butler's Solar Flares: Science Fiction
in the 1970s; and for a substantial recent overview, see "Feminism" by Lisa
Yaszek in The Oxford Handbook of Science Fiction.
To return, in closing, to the anthology's introduction: Ann and Jeff VanderMeer
say that "In a perfect world, Sisters of the Revolution would be followed by several
more volumes, each edited by someone different, with a profoundly different
perspective." That's entirely appropriate. Even with the twenty-nine authors listed
above, there are many other brilliant writers, like Karen Joy Fowler, Caitlín R.
Kiernan, Maureen F. McHugh, Kelly Link, Gwyneth Jones, or Margaret Atwood,
just to name a few, who could and should be featured in subsequent entries.
Science fiction and fantasy truly contain multitudes, and an ongoing exploration of
these manifold, aesthetically variegated expressions, as refracted in the prism of
gender, is necessary to understand not only ourselves, but the possibilities of our
art.
Title: Tales of Time and Space
Author: Allen Steele
Publisher: Fantastic Books
In my previous column I discussed Tom Purdom's Romance on Four Worlds,
published by Fantastic Books. And now I'm here to tout another recent collection
issued by the same publisher: Tales of Time and Space, which happens to be Allen
Steele's sixth such ensemble. The title might be a nod to H. G Wells (Tales of
Space and Time, 1899) or simply an irresistibly archetypical, non-specific allusion
to what has come before, a reminder of our genre's roots -- and scope. Either way,
it works.
We have here twelve entertaining stories which might be divvied up into three
categories: two set in Steele's Coyote universe, four in his Near Space series, and
everything else. Rest assured, one doesn't need to have read previous Coyote or
Near Space works to follow along. Steele provides the necessary backdrop, and a
little extra for additional texture. The collection is thus a robust sampler of
Steele's recent work, though it's less than perfect as an overall showcase of his
talents, precisely because all of these stories are from the last four or five years
and therefore don't do justice to a career that stretches back almost three decades.
The majority of these stories are richly ideated and neatly conceived. They move
along at an unhurried pace and have an almost genteel quality to them. A number
of first-person narrators (Steele himself notes their preponderance in his
introduction, "Pattern Recognition") look back on events that happened decades
before, and that retrospective viewpoint provides, if not nostalgia, a confessional
pathos. In the somber "Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun," for example,
Matt Garris reminisces about a brilliant childhood friend, Terry Koenig, and
pieces together the trajectory that eventually extinguished Koenig's bright light.
This tragic end is revealed upfront; Steele is more preoccupied with character, and
the quiet moments through which character can be glimpsed clearly only in
hindsight, than with suspense or overt drama. Time travel informs "The
Observation Post," which begins with this rumination: "Now I'm old, but when I
was young I did something which has weighed upon my conscience ever since."
I don't mean to suggest that the collection is morose. One of Steele's narrative
strengths is his ability to emulate tropes and storytelling styles of days past,
including literary periods/genres where brisk pacing was the rage. He does this
very well indeed in "Martian Blood," the collection's opener, in which we're
treated to a 1950s astrophysical vision of Mars, heavily imprinted with the
footprints of Burroughs and Brackett, but featuring a few modern ideas. The whole
thing is cool retro-charm at its finest, though it may grate readers unwilling to
embrace the cultural norms of Steele's literary models, decidedly politically
incorrect by our standards. "The Jekyll Island Horror" is my favorite outing in this
mode. In this classic investigation of terrifying alien contact, Steele exuberantly
channels 1930s pulp fiction, including a prototypical "How-I-came-to-learn-of-these-true-events" foreword. "The Big Whale" riffs off Moby Dick by way of
Mickey Spillane: it's colorful and amusing, though perhaps a bit overlong.
"Sixteen Million Leagues from Versailles" and "Alive and Well, A Long Way
from Anywhere" represent perhaps the best balance between these tendencies
towards placid introspection on the one hand and marvelous melodrama on the
other.
History, and an acute perception of the passage of time, pulse throughout the
collection. Alternate pasts, counter-factual presents and retro-futures provide
Steele with elegant parallax shifts through which to examine our deepest impulses
and drives. We may not be surprised by what he discovers, but the dignity and
loving detail with which he weaves his spells make for a gratifying journey
nonetheless.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro