Reviews and Comments

Holger Seelefand

seelefand@bookwyrm.social

Joined 15 hours ago

Mastodon profile: mastodon.green/@seelefand

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White Light (2001, Four Walls Eight Windows) 4 stars

Weired but still a readable debut novel

4 stars

When read as a novel in the classical sense, this falls short. The idea to exemplify mathematical concept in an alternate reality, where the inhabitants are able to do infinitely many countable things in finite time is nice, but it has not enough flesh. I like the jokes based on inversion of concepts: Sentient cars having sex with humans inside and a character that begins as a giant beetle and then turns into Greogor Samsa.

Leviathan Falls (Paperback, 2023, Orbit) 3 stars

The Laconian Empire has fallen, setting the thirteen hundred solar systems free from the rule …

A decent ending which does not try to be more than just that

3 stars

Every saga has to end, for sure. The saga, as art form, is problematic, because the individual installment will often not convince as novels. That is especially true for thing like "the expanse" when the narrative sets out to follow a set of characters linearly over decades of in-story.

But we, the readers, have little right to complain: It is the sort of story we crave after all, because we crave a deep immersion into the narrative.

"Leviathan Falls" stays true to its predecessors: It shies away from potential narrative arks to focus on its characters and do them justice. Overall, that is the right decision.

The "closing of the gates" ending must have felt too defeatist to authors, so they added an epilogue where humanity is traveling between the stars again. It kind of works.

A decent ending which does not try to be more than just that.

On the Beach (Paperback, 1983, Ballantine Books) 4 stars

A novel about the survivors of an atomic war, who face an inevitable end as …

Dated but still affecting

4 stars

My version is actually missing the T.S. Eliot quote:

This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.

Indeed. A lot of things are dated here. The female characters are eyebrow raising at times, and at the time of writing, nuclear winter was not properly understood. But the way almost everyone in this novel is determined to continue with their little occupations and past times right until the end captures some truth about human nature.

Thinking about it further, there is a hint of a pessimistic philosophical undercurrent: The inhabitants of Australia die blamelessly, the war which brought on the lethal radiation was not theirs. And yet, their pastimes express an objectifying carelessness with nature and life. When one of anglers gives advice:

I like a little frog. You get alongside a pool you know about two in the morning with a little frog and …

The End We Start From (Paperback, 2018, Grove Press, Grove/Atlantic, Incorporated) 3 stars

1 volume ; 20 cm

Too much detachment be it for creation or apocalypse

2 stars

Books like these, which are not driven by plot but by language and style are always a bit tougher to discuss.

I loved reading the first couple of pages, the first person narrator's description of giving birth in this witty and detached style, somewhere between prose and poetry.

There are two plots from then on, the narrator's son's first year from baby to toddler and a journey through a country thrown into violent turmoil but a flood catastrophe. The country is actually the UK, but that matters none, because all particularities are abstracted away, along with all the names of novel characters. There is an echo here of Saramago's "Blidness", which took a similar approach.

The issue is that this style-based approach gets somewhat strained even in a short novel like this. To phrase the problem differently: A first person narrator who can keep that level of poetic detachment no …