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Another Dimension
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April 2017
Title: New York 2140
Author: Kim Stanley Robinson
Publisher: Orbit
New
York 2140, Kim Stanley Robinson’s brilliantly constructed new novel, is as
much about confounding expectations as it is about becoming
self-aware of the assumptions that inform such expectations,
regarding everything from real estate value to literary criticism to
the interpretation of history and the perils of denial rooted in our
very instinct to survive. By taking what could easily be construed as
an automatic downer of a premise—the sea level has risen fifty
feet, killing untold many, and parts of New York are now consequently
underwater, literalizing the meaning of “Lower Manhattan”—and
telling a vigorous, multi-modal and yes, wondrous, story of grit,
adaptation, and new beginnings, Robinson refreshes tropes and
reawakens us to the fascination of the future, no matter how
water-logged.
When
I say multi-modal, I mean that New York 2140
tells various types of stories simultaneously, and does so in various
styles: we have a gently paced Wall Street romance, a surreally
mordant kidnapping, a police procedural, an archaeological excavation
led by two teenage “water rats,” a building supervisor
uncovering a conspiracy, a reality show about relocating polar bears,
and the rambunctious observations of a smartass citizen whose
personal details remain deliberately murky. Robinson’s
narrative strategy is to cycle through the points of views of each of
these stories’ leads while simultaneously advancing the plot
such that consecutive chapters intersect the above characters. This
approach pays large dividends, providing a sprightly tempo welcome in
a novel of this length, and inviting us to constantly reassess our
perceptions of the characters. If Franklin, for example, one of the
Wall Street quants, sees himself a certain way, our natural
inclination is to trust this when dealing with him directly in the
first person—only to then reverse our belief or at least
question his self-perceptions when we see what others make of him. In
this way we progressively and collectively get closer to every main
character, learning not only what they see and feel, but what their
blind spots are, without ever hovering above them God-like through an
omniscient narrator. Robinson’s art is to relentlessly ground
generalities in particulars, not only as relates to ideas, but also
characters, and world-creation itself.
Not
every character or story strand will rivet. In my case, the early
chapters with Amanda on the dirigible failed to stimulate. And at
times I found myself wondering if in the next century we wouldn’t
see more radical scientific developments than those extrapolated
here. Where, for instance, is genetic engineering, nanotechnology,
the hybridization of humans with machines, quantum computing, or, for
that matter, the space program?
The
novel’s main thematic investigations concern finance and
economics, and the interrelatedness of finance with everything else,
including, naturally, science. Towards the end this focus becomes a
bit repetitive. Readers familiar with Robinson’s previous works
will note the absence of a scientist protagonist, which I applaud, as
it pushes Robinson to explore psyches more out of his comfort zone.
He’s clearly having fun with language too, beyond the diverse
voices, as seen in the Modernist creation of new, yet immediately
suggestive words like “gehryglory,” “pynchonpoetry,”
or “calvinocity.” The tone of the novel, despite the
often grim settings, is mostly meditative if not optimistic,
something that is consistently conveyed by light-and-water imagery,
as in, “Late on an autumn day, the black water sheeting over a
rising tide, a bar of sunlight mirrorflaking across the middle of it
right to me,” or “it was a sort of cobalt infused with
turquoise, quite a bit bluer than most ocean blues, and its glitter
of reflected sunlight was behind her now, to the north,” or “In
the late afternoon I skimmed home by way of the East River, moving
through the alternation of long shadows and lanes of silver
sunlight.”
The
stupendous amount of geographical, historical and scientific research
Robinson has done is, without calling attention to itself, evident on
every page, and particularly pops in some of the pithy chapter
epigraphs. One such quote, by Gilles Deleuze, begins thus: “Maybe
speech and communication have been corrupted. They’re
thoroughly permeated by money—and not by accident but by their
very nature. We’ve got to hijack speech.”
New
York 2140 is a compelling, oftentimes visionary example of how to accomplish
precisely that.
Title: All Our Wrong Todays
Author: Elan Mastai
Publisher: Dutton
“I
won’t summarize Cat’s Cradle
for you,” says Tom Barren, the protagonist of Elan Mastai’s
ambitious, intricately assembled and poignantly amusing debut novel.
“It’s short and much better written than this book, so
just go read it. It’s weary, cheeky, and wise, which are my
three favorite qualities in people and art.” As it happens,
only one of those qualities is a favorite of mine, which may account for why
throughout the course of the novel’s one hundred and
thirty-seven chapters I didn’t particularly grow to like Tom.
The
novel’s premise is arresting enough: what we think of as
reality is in fact a pretty dreadful overwritten
reality accidentally caused by Tom when he traveled back in time in
his original, utopian reality. Mastai follows through on his
intriguing premise with wild and colorful world-building, and plenty
of verbal pizzazz. Unfortunately for me, that pizzazz is filtered
through Tom’s first-person perspective, and since I didn’t
care much for him, I failed to become immersed in his quest to right
his time-traveling wrong and/or find meaning to his existence. Tom is
full of self-deprecating yet self-pitying banter, and though his
confessional narration is ultimately logically framed within the
story itself, the approach failed to win me over. Considering the
magnitude of his actions’ consequences, his impulsiveness and
ho-hum, mostly superficial perspectives during the novel’s
introductory sections didn’t grab me. Based on the acclaim that
All Our Wrong Todays has been receiving, I’m likely in the minority here, and you
may well find yourself enchanted. Since I’m in a sacrilegious
mood, I’ll also confess that Kurt Vonnegut isn’t one of
my literary sirens, which, given the reference above and others
throughout Mastai’s novel, may help account for why I didn’t
connect with this work aesthetically.
From
a narrative perspective, I found the start-and-stop of the many
chapter breaks disruptive, though I can see how it might plausibly
reflect Tom’s fractured experiences and way of thinking about
things. (Last year I had a similarly off-putting experience with
Blake Crouch’s Dark Matter,
which is also a first-person account of multiple realities, although
in that case my problem was with the paragraphs, which were typically
only one or two lines long.) I’m not sure I was ever sold on
the notion of Tom’s reality as being particularly appealing,
either, despite its technological advances and apparent social
sophistication. When discussing his original world, in Chapter 8, Tom
declares: “In the absence of material want, the world economy
transitioned almost exclusively to entertainment—entertainment
is both the foundation and the fuel of modern civilization.”
Later, in Chapter 34, he says that “Scientific discovery was
the dominant social motivator, since even the most arcane theories
could be enacted by vast resources.” Hmmm.
Mastai’s
novel is certainly a thoughtful one, with much discussion of the
invented sciences of teleportation and time travel, musings on
psychology and fate, and even reflections on the nature of science
fiction and the lulling dangers inherent in optimism. For long
stretches, I found myself nodding along, occasionally smiling, and
admiring the story’s cleverness. Tom himself is not a shallow
guy (though he sometimes acts that way). Witness, for example, this
reflection: “Every person you meet introduces the accident of
that person to you. What can go right and what can go wrong. There is
no intimacy without consequence.” Though we voyage with Tom
through his early familial relationships, the doomed romance with
which his time travel is entangled, and his new set of bonds in the
reformed timeline, I never felt myself touched by any of it.
Reversing Tom’s dictum, we might wonder if there’s also
no meaningful consequence without intimacy.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro