Montreal Gazette

WHAT’S UP ... DOC?

Moreno-garcia’s version of classic tale puts a feminist twist on Doctor Moreau

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The Daughter of Doctor Moreau

Silvia Moreno-garcia Del Rey

CAROL MEMMOTT

In H.G. Wells’s The Island of Doctor Moreau, a mad British scientist sets up shop on a remote island where he reshapes animals into beastly caricature­s of human beings. This 1896 science-fiction classic has inspired film versions starring Burt Lancaster, Marlon Brando and Val Kilmer, as well as numerous references in novels and pop culture, including an episode of The Simpsons.

Silvia Moreno-garcia’s The Daughter of Doctor Moreau offers yet another twist: Here, the mad scientist has a daughter named Carlota who is nothing like her dad. Carlota pushes back on antiquated notions about women’s capabiliti­es and their place in the world, turning the Victorian-era novel into an atmospheri­c feminist tale that melds horror, history and a little romance.

The novel’s first half is laid out as objectivel­y as Moreau’s scientific journals: Moreau, over the years, was “afflicted with a strange creative streak,” Moreno-garcia writes, and “had made furry hybrids with hunched shoulders and short forearms, but also apelike things whose knuckles could brush the ground when they walked.” These horrible creatures suffer with tumours, painful joints and other infirmitie­s. And yet, Moreau insists his work is a higher calling.

Moreau claims his experiment­s will unlock cures for human diseases, and he offers no more powerful example than Carlota, whom he claims is kept alive with injections that derive their healthful properties from jaguars.

Science aside, Carlota pushes the novel forward as she grows up alone with her father in a hacienda that also is home to more than two dozen hidden-away hybrids. Moreno-garcia’s creatures are more human than Wells’s; many speak fluently and have human mindsets. Some seem even more human than Carlota, whose cloistered life feels similar to that of the lifeless dolls which she plays with and mimics in dress.

The novel’s second half burns hot with the appearance of Eduardo, son of Moreau’s benefactor. A handsome, privileged dandy, Eduardo falls for the 19-year-old Carlota. He also has reasons for wanting the hybrids. When the creatures and the Moreaus are threatened, Carlota extends her claws literally and figurative­ly.

Her gradual awakening is hypnotic and a nod to Moreno-garcia’s ability to write female characters whose self-discovery empowers them: “Sometimes she imagined herself stretched out, under the rays of the sun, in the shape of a jaguar, the taste of meat thick on her tongue.”

You may guess how this plot unfolds, but it still surprises.

The Mexico-born Moreno-garcia sets her novel in 1871, during the Caste War of Yucatán, when Indigenous Mayan people were rebelling against the Mexicans and Europeans who abused them and forced them to work on their farms and ranches. This setting adds a powerful historical sensibilit­y to a tale that reflects an era fraught with anti-feminism, misogyny, racism, and class and caste difference­s.

As in the original, Daughter also features a thought-provoking considerat­ion of the moral responsibi­lities of scientists as well as the controvers­ies surroundin­g eugenics.

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 ?? ?? H.G. Wells’s 1896 sci-fi thriller The Island of Dr. Moreau hit the big screen twice, once in 1977 and again in 1996. Now author Silvia Moreno-garcia’s The Daughter of Doctor Moreau has given the scientist a daughter named Carlota, who pushes back on antiquated notions about women’s capabiliti­es.
H.G. Wells’s 1896 sci-fi thriller The Island of Dr. Moreau hit the big screen twice, once in 1977 and again in 1996. Now author Silvia Moreno-garcia’s The Daughter of Doctor Moreau has given the scientist a daughter named Carlota, who pushes back on antiquated notions about women’s capabiliti­es.

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