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Another Dimension
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March 2018
Title: Semiosis
Author: Sue Burke
Publisher: Tor Books
Sue
Burke’s remarkable debut novel pulls off a rare double feat: it
manages to inject new life into a concept often explored in science
fiction, and to create one of the most compelling alien viewpoints
I’ve encountered in the genre.
First,
the conceit: human explorers, after enduring 158 years of hibernation
on “a tiny spaceship,” are delivered to star HIP 30815f
and settle one of its orbiting planets, which they name Pax—“since
we had come to live in peace.” The world is ecologically
developed, only the colonists don’t at first realize how
developed. Its plants, it turns out, are sentient. This idea goes
back a long way. By no means the first example, but nevertheless an
early treatment of interest, is Stanley Weinbaum’s “The
Lotus Eaters” (Astounding Stories,
April 1935), in which humans make first contact with communally
intelligent plants on Venus. Other notable variations on a theme
include John Wyndham’s The Day of the Triffids
(1951), Clifford D Simak’s All Flesh is Grass
(1965), Ursula K Le Guin’s “Vaster than Empires and More
Slow” (New Dimensions 1,
1971), China Miéville’s Perdido Street Station
(2000)—remember the bizarre Cactacae?—and a personal
favorite, Robert Reed’s “To Church With Mr. Multhiford”
(F&SF, October-November 1997) in which human evolution turns out to have
been directed by corn’s domestication of us.
Clearly Burke had a lot to lose by invoking such a well-mined trope,
but not only does her novel hold its own, it does so with unusual
rigor and technical narrative ingenuity.
I
suppose that calling it a novel may be a bit misleading, since we are
treated to a chronicle in the form of seven generational episodes.
The first four of these proceed chronologically, providing key events
from the consecutive generations 1, 2, 3 and 4, but the last three
are out of order, giving us generations 6, 7 and 5. For plot reasons
I won’t divulge, this turns out to be a successful strategy in
terms of suspense and character development. The story kicks off with
a first-generation Paxan, the biologist Octavo, coming to believe,
after careful observation, that humans have entered an ecology in
which two different plant species are waging war. “We left
behind the failed paradigms like war,” another character tells
him, unconvincingly. Octavo must make a decision to ensure human
survival, and with his actions he sows, if you’ll pardon the
pun, the seeds of both heart-rending conflict and incredible
revelation that will be reaped by ensuing generations. Thirty-four
years after planetfall, the teenager Sylvia notes “strange
flashes of color in a mat of branches that had washed on shore”
and shortly thereafter unearths “something pink in the sand,
maybe a chunk of rose quartz.” These clues lead to fascinating
developments regarding the second generation’s knowledge of
Pax, destabilizing the overall human colony in a major way. And then
we jump to the sixty-third year after planetfall, in a chapter titled
“Higgins and the Bamboo.” Observant readers of the novel
will notice that Octavo and Sylvia, the first-person narrators of the
first two sections respectively, have these sections named after
them—and yes, if you’ll forgive a mild stylistic spoiler,
such astute readers would be right to guess that the Bamboo, along
with Higgins, becomes a first-person narrator in the third section.
Previously made assumptions are upended, as yet further discoveries
made by humans about other intelligent life-forms on Pax complicate a
delicate balance.
Throughout
this and the other chapters, Burke’s no-nonsense prose doles
out exposition in just the right portions to keep us engaged and
curious. When the Bamboo speaks, and in a few other select passages,
we do get plenty of scientific terminology and concepts, but they are
germane to the story, never a hindrance. They also generate a kind of
stark poetry ironically absent in the more human-centric
descriptions. I found Semiosis’s
chemical, biological, and geological underpinnings artfully laid, and
it’s refreshing to read a non-physics
based science fiction text that doesn’t skim on the science. At
times, the story’s ecological inventiveness and environmental
emphasis made me think of works like Doris Piserchia’s
Earthchild (1977) and the better-known Ecotopia
(1975) by Ernest Callenbach, but whatever attitudes are voiced within
the story are done so in complex ways, almost always examined and
dissected in search of greater truths. Said differently: fear not any
plant-itudes! Semiosis resembles Robert Charles Wilson’s Bios
(1999) more in its approach, and also brings to mind works by Sheri
S. Tepper.
I
expect that not every first-person voice and tone will work for every
reader. It was hard for me, for instance, to warm to Higgins, though
I grew to appreciate him more after the fact. The shift, within the
greater story and context, to various genre molds such as murder
mystery and courtroom procedural may also prove jarring for readers
seeking greater cohesion. If nothing else, we should commend Burke’s
ambition with these additional flourishes. For me, Semiosis’s
highlight remains the unforgettable first-person narration by Pax’s
native sentient organisms.
After
years of being absent from science fiction, Isaac Asimov returned to
the genre with a book titled The Gods Themselves
(1972), which went on to earn Nebula and Hugo Awards. Like Semiosis,
The Gods Themselves is made up of sections—three rather than seven—that jump
in time non-sequentially, and like Semiosis,
perhaps its most memorable feature is its middle section’s
alien-viewpoint story, featuring three-gendered,
photosynthesis-driven extraterrestrials. In a way, Sue Burke has here
exceeded that act of creation, for she had less wiggle-room: her
aliens are firmly, ahem, rooted in what we know about plant species,
and thus possess greater verisimilitude. What a swell way to start a
novelistic career.
Title: Ambiguity Machines and Other Stories
Author: Vandana Singh
Publisher: Small Beer Press
Do
you enjoy stories inspired by equal parts myth and theoretical
physics? How about introspective characters whose thoughtfulness
doesn’t prevent them from taking action when the circumstances
demand? Perhaps you also relish rich descriptive passages abounding
in sensory detail, like the following:
The
city rose over the banks of the Yamuna like a poet’s dream.
Here was the delicate arch of a doorway, the doors carved with scenes
from a fairy tale; there was a temple spire, beside the dark crown of
a mango tree. The dome of a mosque, silver in the twilight, and above
it the fort itself, red sandstone, turrets, and tessellations. Closer
at hand: a man selling roasted shakarkand under a tree by the
roadside: the smell of coal and sweetness and spices, the flare of
the fire. Voices from within a walled garden where somebody was
watering rosebushes. He could smell wet earth and the inescapable
fragrance of roses. The horseless carriages still startled him as
they went by, leaving behind a wet smell, coal and steam, and the
image of a face or faces at a window. Here and there were patrols of
the king, guards in red and brown, with green turbans, riding horses.
And the ornate carriages filled with nobility, pulled by the great,
white, humped oxen that stood six feet high at the shoulder.
If
so, I have something for you. Vandana Singh’s new collection,
Ambiguity Machines and Other Stories,
gathers one previously-unpublished novella, four novelettes and nine
short stories originally published from 2007 to 2015, that amply
reflect the above while providing enough narrative variation to keep
things interesting. Singh’s first collection, The
Woman Who Thought She Was a Planet and Other Stories
(2008), was widely praised at the time of its release, and as
evidenced by these selections in the intervening years she has
deepened her craft.
Of
the fourteen pieces collected here, my favorite five occur at the
tail ends. “With Fate Conspire,” which opens the book,
tells of a woman named Gargi-di compelled by scientists to use a
mysterious history-gazing Machine to capture never-before-recorded
poetry by Wajid Ali Shah. While using the device, Gardi-di begins to
deceive her captors, passing off her own creations as factual while
undertaking the study of a woman apparently unimportant to history.
Gardi’s experiences, and the eventual revelation of her
captors’ true motives, are beautifully enmeshed with a vision
of time as a delta from which spring various rivulets. Following this
story, “A Handful of Rice” (from which I quoted the above
passage) chronicles the conflict of two spiritual brothers with very
different ideas about how to practice “prana vidya.”
Besides the story’s wonderful depictions of specific places and
times, I was fascinated by how the philosophical rift between
Vishnumitra and Upamanyu, who it is soon revealed has become the
king, not only propels their divergent paths but is also the perfect
arbiter of their respective fates.
The
book’s final three pieces are “Wake-Rider,” the
titular “Ambiguity Machines: An Examination,” and
“Requiem.” The first of these, in which starship-piloting
Lelia attempts to evade a seemingly all-powerful Euphoria Corpocracy,
is perhaps the collection’s most action-laden tale, and I
enjoyed every heart-pounding moment. This is not to say that the
story’s backdrop, with its docility-engendering nanoplagues, is
shortchanged; in fact, I can see it acting as an intriguing milieu
for future stories. The “An Examination” subtitle of the
next story is a clever double entendre, for the narrative functions
both as a philosophical interrogation of fate and an actual test for
candidates “taking the exam for the position of Junior
Navigator in the uncharted negative seas of Conceptual
Machine-Space.” As readers we become these exam-takers, and are
treated to three accounts designed to stimulate thought on ambiguity
machines, that is, devices that “blur or dissolve boundaries,”
as does the narrative itself by inviting us directly into it. The
three accounts function as lovely and enigmatic stand-alone stories,
as grounded in concrete settings—the Gobi desert and Altai
Mountains, a small Italian town, and the desert town of Tessalit—as
are abstract their framing prologue and epilogue. Finally, “Requiem”,
which the acknowledgments make clear was inspired by an actual trip
to Alaska by the author in 2014, is a touching meditation on loss,
hope, and the possibilities of communication across realms. In
reviewing Singh’s first collection in 2009, Paul Witcover
observed that in the best of her stories “the ending opens
outward,” and that’s certainly an apt description for the
endings of these three stories, and one of the reasons I found them
so satisfying.
The
collection’s remaining entries contain plenty of mind-expanding
concepts from the cutting edge of physics and more than one direct
allusion to various myths, including the Indian epic Ramayana.
Certain themes emerge: the importance of familial relationships, as
for example that between Mahua and her grandmother in the near-future
eco-speculative “Indra’s Web” and that of Jhingur
and his grandmother in the grim “Are you Sannata3159?” Community
and kinship with one’s environment, whether by its
absence—Ghardi in “With Fate Conspire” and Avinash
in the fantastic “Cry of the Kharchal” both suffer a deep
sense of displacement from their former lives—or by its
presence (the various Peoples in “Sailing the Antarsa,”
for instance) is likewise a recurring preoccupation. Finally, we
encounter time and again the idea that our connectivity may be
empowered not by proximity or like-mindedness but by distortions in
the very fabric of thought and reality. Time-loops, webs of
consciousness and history bend back upon themselves in startling and
illuminating ways. “Would we sit together, Suryavati, Isha, and
I, with you, and feel teso
within us—and weave meaning from the strands of the tale?”
asks Somadeva in the meta-textual “Somadeva: A Sky River
Sutra”? Probing the world through the pattern-seeking of
science and the pattern-making of myth, these stories suggest, thus
becomes vitally important to the human experience.
A
possible downside to this headiness is that at times Singh’s
plots become supporting actors to her evocative aesthetic and
interrogation of life’s imponderables, so that significant
events are stripped of immediacy, consequences of actions connected
like chains rather than springs. Chronicling experiences in the form
of memories and sweeping narrations, rather than presenting them
through staged scenes, sometimes creates a distancing effect in
Singh’s prose. This is a particular pitfall, I think, when she
opts for first-person narration. But even when this distancing effect
arises, it’s still easy to delight at her ideas. In
“Peripeteia,” for instance, we are introduced to
“Sujata’s Cosmic Censorship Principle,” which
states that “All material objects are surrounded by clouds of
ambiguity—which may be virtual particles or prejudices or
paradigms. Nothing in the universe is naked.” That may be so,
but Singh’s compassionate imagination and storytelling talents
are here clearly on display.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro