Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

GIANT LEAP FOR THE SCI-FI NOVEL

THE ‘STATION ELEVEN’ AUTHOR’S LATEST JUMPS ACROSS TIME.

- BY BETHANNE PATRICK Patrick is a freelance critic who tweets @TheBookMav­en.

THERE IS a small moment in Emily St. John Mandel’s new novel, “Sea of Tranquilit­y,” that you might miss: A man recalls, from his childhood, a moment when his mother glanced at a photo of the “Earth Ocean” while stirring soup. Four centuries from now, their family lives on Colony One, a humanengin­eered city with a manufactur­ed river but no seas or oceans.

This man, GasperyJac­ques Roberts, has private fixations of his own. He may be mysterious­ly connected to someone who lived many years ago, or at least to her imaginatio­n. Novelist Olive Llewellyn included a character named Gaspery in her smash-hit 23rd century bestseller “Marienbad.”

Llewellyn, in another section, is haunted by the success of “Marienbad,” a dystopian novel she wrote on the brink of an actual pandemic. The parallel to Mandel herself, who is also the married mother of a young daughter, has to be intentiona­l. Mandel was virtually hailed as a prophet — a designatio­n she disliked — after her pandemic-dystopian 2014 bestseller, “Station Eleven,” was adapted into a hit HBO Max miniseries just in time for COVID-19.

Llewellyn too plays the reluctant seer. One of the novel’s most affecting sections unfolds as she realizes her suspicions about a coming virus were correct; she cancels the rest of her book tour and heads home, weeping along the way, stripping off her likely contaminat­ed clothes on the sidewalk.

“Sea of Tranquilit­y” might be Mandel’s “pandemic novel” in the sense that it’s the one she wrote over the last two years, but it documents a different kind of human glitch. As the story opens, a young British man, Edwin St. Andrew, experience­s a strange suite of sensory events in 1912 in a Canadian forest, where he meets a man named — yes — Gaspery Roberts.

Mandel knows how to brew a story. As Edwin, Gaspery and other people scattered across time — a teenager named Vincent, an aging violinist named Alan Sami — all experience similar visions, we settle in for a juicy sci-fi ride, replete with time travel, lunar colonies and robot landscaper­s. But Mandel is less concerned with the mechanics of science fiction than with using its tropes to chart new courses through human relationsh­ips and their consequenc­es.

At the farthest edge of “Sea of Tranquilit­y’s” time frame, it’s the turn of the 25th century, Gaspery’s native “present.” He is looking for new employment, and his sister Zoey works for the mysterious and powerful Time Institute. The concept of time travel has been widely accepted, and its bylaws call back to the most familiar sci-fi (from Ray Bradbury to “Back to the Future”): Don’t tell anyone about your mission. Don’t stand out. Don’t interfere with a person’s life, even to save it.

The book jumps across time with impunity, following an internal map that will make exquisite sense at the end and only at the end. Its middle expands on Gaspery’s life, taking him from a listless 20-something to a somewhat unconvinci­ng new candidate at the Time Institute.

We’re meant to believe Zoey uses her influence to get her brother the position, but it’s difficult to understand why he wants it so badly.

That’s a small quibble to make of a novel that is pure pleasure to read. “Sea of Tranquilit­y” isn’t “Station Eleven.” It also isn’t “The Glass Hotel.” Mandel stans might already surmise that the Vincent named here is Vincent Alkaitis of “Hotel”; he and Mirella Kessler have roles to play, although the connection between the novels is more conceptual than narrative. That’s to the good because, in retrospect, “Hotel” feels like a step backward, “Tranquilit­y” a giant leap.

After the initial trauma of lockdown, it seems Mandel has unlocked the sense of play and puzzlemaki­ng that shimmered in her earliest work (for example, the etymologic­al fun in “Last Night in Montreal”). Following Gaspery as he travels across time may remind you of the best passages in Ben H. Winters’ work or, even better, Ursula K. Le Guin’s.

Yet, as in “Station Eleven,” Mandel is far more interested in human psychology than world-building. Witness Gaspery’s eventual undoing — where he winds up, what he does with his life. This brave new world is built on technology but still leaves room for old traditions — for violin lessons and, still more improbably, long attention spans. The Time Institute has its plans for humanity, but it hasn’t (yet) figured out how to control every individual psyche. People can still find wormholes with its

wormholes to pursue their own ends — which can be as simple as helping a loved one or as complex as an ambition to save the world. If art is what survives in “Station Eleven,” here it is free will.

Of course, Mandel is too smart, and the rest of us too scarred by the past couple of years, to buy into any utopia. She reserves her greatest scorn for the bureaucrat­s of the Time Institute. “What you have to understand is that bureaucrac­y is an organism,” Zoey tells Gaspery. “And the prime goal of every organism is selfprotec­tion. Bureaucrac­y exists to protect itself.” Is this a Canadian thing? (Mandel grew up in Quebec.) U.S. citizens have no love lost on bureaucrat­s, but they don’t hang the evils of the world on them.

Maybe we should. Mandel’s writing on bureaucrac­y recalls the functionar­ies in the movie “Brazil,” the goblins of Gringotts in the “Harry Potter” series and the government employees in the TV series “Counterpar­t.” They’re competitiv­e, malevolent and paranoid. One of the book’s last aha! moments involves Gaspery realizing someone from the institute has been manipulati­ng Llewellyn all along — a dark but funny comment on the machinatio­ns of book publishing.

Which returns us to Gaspery’s memory of the “Earth Ocean.” For all their water features, the colonies cannot replace the wonder of nature — the dark green forests and deep blue seas. More than one character has family “back on Earth”; Llewellyn’s parents chose to retire there.

Following a superb stylist like Mandel is like watching an expert lacemaker at work: You see the strands and later the beautiful results, but your eyes simply cannot follow what comes in between. As in her best work, including “Station Eleven,” she is less concerned with endings than with continuity. In “Sea of Tranquilit­y,” her vision is not quite as bleak, but it is as strong — I won’t say prophetic — as ever.

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 ?? Knopf ?? Sarah Shatz MANDEL’S new novel explores time travel.
Knopf Sarah Shatz MANDEL’S new novel explores time travel.

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