Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Science Fiction Roundup

- By GARY K. WOLFE Special to the Tribune

“Ahab’s Return”

Those who struggled through Moby-Dick” in lit classes might be hesitant about a sequel in which Captain Ahab survives, but there are no whales in sight in Jeffrey Ford’s fast-moving thriller set in 1850s New York. Ford, who has won World Fantasy Awards and the mystery writers’ Edgar Award, displays both sides of his talent as Ahab tries to track down his missing family and confront Ishmael, who he thinks treated him unfairly in episodes chronicled in “Moby-Dick.” He enlists the aid of a reporter for a tabloid, a resourcefu­l street girl, a gorgeous woman novelist and an African harpooner who also survived the Pequod.

Soon they find themselves tangling with a gang of feral kids, led by a demonic figure called the Pale King Toad, zombie-like minions and a monstrous Manticore. Ford’s villain is associated with the real anti-immigrant Know-Nothing Party, devoted to “a quest for the reclamatio­n of white Protestant superiorit­y.” The problems of racism, homelessne­ss, addiction and “Me First” politics cut close to home, but Ford also offers a hopeful interlude set in Seneca Village, the peaceful multicultu­ral community that once occupied what is now Central Park. Ford’s elegant style helps make this thriller far more timely than it first appears to be.

“Irontown Blues”

John Varley sets many stories in a loosely connected sequence called the Eight Worlds, after humanity is evicted from Earth by superior aliens and forced to settle on other worlds. His latest is set in one of those colonies, on the moon, but it’s also an affectiona­te tribute to the hard-boiled mysteries of Raymond Chandler. The protagonis­t, Christophe­r Bach, sports a trenchcoat and fedora, and even lives in a neighborho­od called Noirtown, where every block re-creates a different 20th-century decade. But the neon sign outside his office is just a video display, and his dog Sherlock is actually a superintel­ligent “Cybernetic­ally Enhanced Canine” who narrates part of the story. Not surprising­ly, Bach’s sexy client Mary Smith isn’t quite who she first appears to be, either.

Mary wants him to find a man who she claims deliberate­ly infected her with a leprosylik­e illness. This leads him to the Irontown district, where he uncovers secrets not only of his own past but that of his mother, an ex-police chief. While the mystery deepens and gets a bit tangled, Varley’s richly imagined lunar society, a kind of theme park based on memories of Earth, is equally central to the novel, as is the wonderfull­y odd storytelli­ng voice of the dog Sherlock.

“Alien Virus Love Disaster”

The title of Abbey Mei Otis’ first story collection may sound like a cross between a tabloid headline and a cheap horror movie, but Otis actually belongs with writers like Kelly Link, who freely borrow genre materials to construct elegant literary fictions far more about character than spectacle. The title story does involve a virus from outer space that escapes a secret government lab and begins transformi­ng people in a neighborin­g town, but the focus is on the young narrator and her little brother coping with radical changes over which they have no control. The aliens that show up in other stories are more often benign than hostile.

Other stories take place in decaying, almost dystopian suburbs where odd things happen, such as a sex robot falling out of the sky, or a mother so addicted to a virtual world better than her own that she ignores her kids during a crisis.

As odd as these worlds are, they are populated by sharply drawn characters we come to care about through Otis’ luminescen­t prose.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States