Friday, August 16, 2019

Review: Ghost Wall by Sarah Moss

A novella is best defined as, or described to be, a short book. In my opinion, the best novellas don't read like long short stories or quick novels. Rather, the ones I find myself coming back to are written with such precision and enthusiasm that between the world building and the plot you find yourself forgetting each of those aren't themselves characters when suddenly it's over. A novella makes me want more, but I don't feel shortchanged when it's done right.

Sarah Moss's Ghost Wall is a novella that tells the bone-chilling tale of a teenage girl and her mother trapped on what can most poorly be described as the worst camping trip ever. You see, Silvie's dad has some very firmly held beliefs with regard to his wife and daughter's place, and less regard for them than his fascination with ancient Brits. Dark things happen in the woods, and Silvie may very well have to fight through these terrors if she hopes to come out of this family vacation alive.

I don’t know a better word to describe the crafting of this wonderful novella than “beautiful.” This horrifying and brief flurry of pages is brilliantly paced. Ghost Wall's every detail and moment drives towards inevitable violence with a precision and a tone each fully capable of sending chills down the spine of any psychological horror enthusiast (or casual reader!) The story asks several very exacting questions of its readers, but ultimately we are made to wonder: what is man’s violence and how willingly does it separate its victims (women & children) from time and place? This is a traumatic and carefully written piece of fiction that I know I’ll be revisiting more than once.

- Frank

More But I'd Rather Be Reading! here.

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Review: The Book of the Long Sun: Lake of the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe


Lake of the Long Sun continues Patera Silk's quest to recover his manteion (church) from the clutches of an aristocratic crime-lord. Along the way, he'll somehow get through an exorcism that quickly turns into a pulp murder mystery, complain a lot about walking in the heat of the day, and make a dramatic run through a series of tunnels that reveal his world is a generational starship (really, this is a throw-in-the-towel word on the back cover synopsis, and I don't want you to think knowing that will ruin your ability to read this book and be just as awed and inspired by Wolfe's command of narrative as you should be.) There's a lot more standard science fiction fare in Lake of the Long Sun than there was in the first novel, but that's just the fun!

The bulk of this novel is world-building. Wolfe wants you to feel what Silk can not possibly understand: this place is a massive man-made vehicle to preserve life en route to another planet, but it's been in operation for an unknown space of time and, between the people surviving in the Short Sun whorl and the machinery and operations of the ship breaking down and being salvaged by unwitting survivors, it's not looking like it'll be a place anyone can survive on for much longer. Does Silk realize this? No, not yet, and never as such. But then, he's just beginning to learn that the lust and overall corruption of mankind is never simply the fault of someone who sins. (Yes, these novels are thematically steeped in the spiritual teachings of Christ.) Can Silk learn that his love for people and his hope for them to improve and live better lives means more than simply adhering to the rules and living with his nose to the ground all while cyborgs try to kill him for stumbling into government conspiracies to trap mankind on a dying ship in space simply to indulge their own desires to be immortal gods?

In my previous review of the first book of the series, I wanted to make clear that Gene Wolfe is never a casual read and I'm trying to sort out the mysteries of this tetralogy while enjoying his mastery of prose and command of narrative. Mr. Wolfe was a very dense and intricate writer who was extremely fond of using archaic words and unreliable narrators, as well as cliffhangers, to challenge his readers to look for the story they wanted to read in his work. It's still difficult, even after this re-read, to explain what's so brilliant about Lake of the Long Sun, but I can tell you a lot about what is brilliant: There's so much play between subtle and blunt exposition, the world-building Wolfe so effectively crafts and cultivates through dialogue and dizzying twists and turns in the plot, that, on the surface, as with all of these novels, makes little sense. Do some exploring in the tunnels, in the deeps, of the Lake of the Long Sun, and you'll find that amid all the swashbuckling bravado, death, and espionage intrigue, there's a science fiction story that has a lot to say about misogyny, government, religion, the breakdown of how a society may forget its history and its technological capacity, and the makings of a hero.

Again, if you're looking for a straightforward science fiction novel, you won't find that here. Have a dictionary handy, or else be ready to do some encyclopedic research for fun, because Lake continues where the first book left off and goes nowhere you expect it to: no matter how obvious every single character in the book says the plot to be, the reader is in for a wild ride that doesn't let up even after it's over. Happily, there's two more books.

- Frank

More But I'd Rather Be Reading! here.