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Another Dimension
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December 2017
Title: Mandelbrot the Magnificent
Author: Liz Ziemska
Publisher: Tor.com
Mathematical
science fiction and fantasy go back at least to E. A. Abbott’s
dimensional divertimento Flatland
(1884), possibly farther, and yet they’re not much written
these days. A small cadre of writers, such as Greg Egan, Vandana
Singh, Ted Chiang, and Rudy Rucker—a mathematician by
training—occasionally write compelling and beautiful stories
with math premises, sure, but generally speaking, these are few and
far between. Powering a plot with a mathematical idea that’s
interesting, yet without being so abstruse that no amount of
exposition will make it shine, is difficult to do well, and even
maestros in the field risk unattractive results when they venture
into these waters. Case in point, Arthur C. Clarke’s
infatuation with fractals led to some, ah, generous digressions in
The
Ghost from the Grand Banks,
which would have been a thin novel struggling to stay afloat even if
Clarke hadn’t packed in the additional ballast.
I
mention Clarke because fractals is also the branch of mathematics on
hand in Liz Ziemska’s wonderful novella Mandelbrot
the Magnificent, and because the contrast with Clarke’s novel couldn’t be
more stark. According to Stephen Hawking, he was once told that each
equation he included in his book A Brief History of Time
would halve the book’s sales. Joke or not, I’m glad
Ziemska didn’t adopt a similar philosophy here, and I’m
thankful that Ann VanderMeer, her editor on this project, embraced
her approach. There are equations, and there are charts, and there
are shapes, and they are glorious. More importantly, they are
essential for illustrating Mandelbrot’s growing depth of
mathematical awareness and his perceptual reinterpretation of the
world through abstract thinking. The mathematics here is also germane
to the plot, which would come across as impossibly hand-wavy without
it.
The
novella, constructed as a first-person memoir, begins in an undefined
present in which Mandelbrot is an old man, and then proceeds
chronologically from Mandelbrot’s birth in 1924, in the
soon-to-be Warsaw Ghetto. Mandelbrot’s mathematical
precociousness is evident early on. As a young teen, for example, his
ability to solve a triple integral by dint of geometric intuition is
well ahead of the kind of thinking his peers are capable of, probably
on a par with the abilities of high school seniors or even college
students. As World War II engulfs Poland, Mandelbrot and his family
relocate to France for safety, albeit one that proves tragically
temporary. Besides Mandelbrot’s adolescent experiences, Ziemska
provides plenty of period details. She even manages the feat of
integrating some of Mandelbrot’s own words, subtly reassembled,
into her story. Consider, for example, Mandelbrot’s real-life
observation that “Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not
cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does
lightning travel in a straight line” and compare it with
Ziemska’s text: “Look at the clouds—they are not
spheres. Mountains are not cones, light does not travel in a straight
line, and bark is not smooth. Nature is rough and beautiful, not
rigid and symmetrical, like the world of numbers in which Uncle
Szolem lived.” The way she has simplified the syntax to match
the youthfulness of the voice she’s evoking, extended the
thought into character depiction, and earned this particular
realization with the appropriate organic foreshadowing, is a master
lesson in storytelling.
This
is a fantasy story, so readers will expect something more than a
straight-away fictionalized memoir, and Ziemska delivers on this
front. All I’ll say about her speculative idea is that it
combines mathematics and Jewish mysticism in a way that feels
entirely plausible within the context of the narrative, and ends up
illuminating Mandelbrot’s character and his place in a long
family line of Talmudic ancestors.
Since
the opening line of Ziemska’s novella introduces us to Aliette
Kagan (Mandelbrot’s wife from 1955 until the year of his death,
2010) perhaps it behooves us to return for a moment to Aliette’s
perspective. Aliette once described Mandelbrot this way:
“I
remember Benoit always sitting at his desk, years of sitting for many
long hours, writing, crossing out, rewriting, cutting, pasting. While
writing, he would often check one of his many dictionaries. It was
important for him to use words with their exact meanings.”
(Benoit Mandelbrot: A Life In Many Dimensions)
Liz
Ziemska’s sensitive and wonderfully wrought secret history of
Mandelbrot retroactively adds an unexpected layer to the above words,
for after reading her story, we see that of course Mandelbrot would
be extremely cautious and precise with his use of language, for he
would have known its Kabalistic power—the literalized ability
of mathematics to reshape the world. Real life gave us Mandelbrot the
magnificent mathematician; Ziemska gives us Mandelbrot the mage and
mensch-in-the-making. Who are we to say whether the distance between
the former and latter is vast or infinitesimal?
I
suspect that Ziemska herself spent long hours at her desk, or perhaps
computer, laboring to use words with their exact meanings when
writing this story. Or perhaps I’m wrong and it arose in a fit
of inspiration. Either way, this rich and vividly felt novella is a
testament to her artistry. It demonstrates the truth behind one
character’s insightful words: in storytelling, as in life,
“beauty combines compassion with strength.”
Title: Infinity Wars
Editor: Jonathan Strahan
Publisher: Solaris
The
title gives away the thematic emphasis of the sixth volume in
Jonathan Strahan’s editorial Infinity
series: the future of war. Fifteen writers tackle manifold questions
about conflict and the moral implications of war, whether one is an
active participant or a remote observer. Out of the anthology’s
fifteen stories, I think five are superb, and fully live up to the
Introduction’s promise not only of envisioning future war
scenarios but of “delivering great science fiction.” My
favorite is E. J. Swift’s “Weather Girl,” an
expertly, coolly told dual narrative about the titular character, a
woman whose work involves classified government activities, and her
ex-husband, who roams the planet quietly observing human existence
and sending the “weather girl” pictures, without captions
or explanations of any kind. It begins like this: “Sometimes
when she closed her eyes at night she saw spirals, wheeling slowly
against the backs of her eyelids, each one its own perfect fractal.”
The war premise here involves weather, and how knowledge or lack
thereof regarding future catastrophic events, such as typhoons, may
in itself constitute an act of aggression: technology weaponizing
nature without affecting its natural course. There’s a chilling
logic to the way Swift threads this notion, and the character
development throughout is superb. The twin narratives, linked by the
shared past of their protagonists, are also thematically unified by
their preoccupation with secrets and exposure, and they elegantly
come together in a quietly devastating finale. As soon as I had
finished this story I went back and re-read certain scenes. It’s
bleak, multi-layered, and, as a commentary on human nature, feels
utterly plausible.
Elizabeth
Bear’s “Perfect Gun” is another superb entry. In
this wicked piece Bear subverts a variety of tough-guy-mercenary
story tropes by outfitting her protagonist—John Steel—with
a sentient weapon that challenges him both emotionally and morally.
The prose is tight and muscled, full of irony: “She had 36DD
turrets and a 26-inch titanium alloy hull with carbon-ceramic
plating. Double-barrel exhaust and a sleek underbelly. Her lines were
magnificent. I had to stop myself from staring. I wanted to run my
hand along her curves.” Short scenes build momentum
effectively, and Bear manages to have her cake and eat it too,
featuring plenty of testosterone and riveting action. The final few
lines are extremely satisfying, and only improved by the story’s
end-note, which reveals that Bear penned this on Valentine’s
Day. Beyond the perverse pleasure derived from knowing that Bear was
engaged in the creation of such a satirical, hard-hitting story
during a time of socially-mandated romantic gestures, the end-note
reinforces the notion that “Perfect Gun” may be read as a
love story critiquing itself, and that war and love are closer than
we think.
Nancy
Kress’s “Dear Sarah” is an excellent, concise
exploration of moral responsibility and loyalty in the face of
economic depression and dwindling opportunities. Against the wishes
of her impoverished family, MaryJo leaves her native town of
Brightwater and enlists in the military, primarily motivated by her
realization that “shooting good is what I got.” Her
enlistment immediately gets her called a traitor by her father, who
despite his regressive views and reactionary behavior has a position
we can understand: MaryJo will be fighting “our home-raised
anti-Likkie terrorists,” a group of humans opposed to the
presence of the alien Likkies on Earth. While her family shuns her,
MaryJo nevertheless manages to sneak letters in to her younger sister
Sarah. Part of the story’s virtue lies in the juxtaposition of
its slangy, a-grammatical locutions—which create a real sense
of voice—with the story’s gut-wrenching quandary
regarding MaryJo’s allegiances. When push comes to shove, which
side will she be on?
Indrapramit
Das’s “The Moon is Not a Battlefield” similarly
does a great job constructing a believable near-future through a
first-person narrator, depicting how Indian orphans are turned into
soldiers, used and then discarded when no longer needed. Das’s
attention to sensory detail is splendid, and his tale builds to a
supreme sense of pathos, poetically and harshly rendered.
I
also need to single out the anthology’s closing novelette,
Peter Watts’s “ZeroS.” In this tour-de-force
exploration of the meaning of consciousness, and the complex
relationship between conscious and unconscious behavior, Watts
introduces us to Asante, a soldier who dies in the story’s
first line—or does he? His body certainly perishes, but his
brain is salvaged and repurposed by the “Zombie Corps,” a
name inspired by the idea of “Zero Sum” fighters. Thus
reborn, Asante endures all sorts of grueling missions, and as his
acts of violence bring him ever closer to children, he’s pushed
to the breaking point of even his newly altered mind. This is a deep
and disturbing examination not only of the technological
possibilities of future humans to unleash a very real type of hell on
Earth, but a meditation on the warfare that occurs within the human
psyche at all times, regardless of our bodily matrix.
Other
stories I quite enjoyed include Aliette de Bodard’s “In
Everlasting Wisdom,” in which “appeasers” donned
with symbiotic alien implants telepathically pacify the increasingly
desperate and restless subjects of the Emperor, Eleanor Arnason’s
“Mines,” in which a mine-sweeper becomes most effective
when telepathically connected with an African Giant Pouched Rat named
Whiskers, Dominica Phettaplace’s “Oracle,” a
mordant and satirical look at the power—and limitations—of
algorithms, Garth Nix’s funny-but-increasingly-manic
“Conversations with an Armory,” featuring a testy AI
trying the patience of desperate soldiers, and David D. Levine’s
“Command and Control,” which grittily reveals the effects
of teleportation technology on war, as experienced by
Tibetan-situated ground troops led by a potentially over-ambitious
sergeant.
The
anthology also contains interesting work by Carrie Vaughn, An
Owomoyela, Caroline M. Yoachim, Genevieve Valentine and Rich Larson,
all fine writers. Some of these stories will no doubt be standouts
for other readers, but they didn’t fully click with me. In a
few of these cases one of my issues was length: I felt like less
would have been more. In a few others, tone. Also, I’ll note
that it was unfortunate that a cluster of these stories occurred
right at the start of the anthology, which made for a lukewarm first
impression. If this happens to you, stick with the book—or
better yet, read out of order. I realized later on that I may have
been judging too harshly, as well, given the very high standard of
some of the previous volumes in this series (see, for example,
my
review of the fourth book, Meeting Infinity, in this same space).
Overall, this is a solid anthology, and it contains some of the best
science fiction stories I’ve read this year.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro