| Earthling | |||||||||||||||
| Tony Daniel | |||||||||||||||
| Tor Books, 282 pages | |||||||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
It's a tale of destruction, survival, and rebuilding, but with imperfect construction.
"The Robot's Twilight Companion" starts the novel off right, with a tale of a machine and a
man and connection. Call me a sucker for artificial intelligence, but the main character is
the best reason to continue reading. Orf, the sentient drilling robot, offers a gentle,
compassionate personality, a touch of humanity. The humans that surround him have far less
grasp of the needs and promises of being human. Orf is a tender soul in a world rapidly
dividing. A world there will never be a better time to leave.
"Twilight Companion" has a sweet, lyrical quality. It draws in the reader. It made me love
the character, but, as I said, soft-hearted machines are one of my favourite subjects.
Then, everything changes, like a first-date nightmare. He sounded so wonderful on the phone!
The tone of "Pennyroyal Tea" makes you nostalgic for the first section of the book. It's a
primitive world, where little of the old order has survived.
Nothing has survived unchanged, and almost none of the changes are for the better.
The plot takes on a quest form, a search with a mystery at the end, a computer game on paper.
And like most computer games -- the commercial successes, at any rate -- it is a brutal
story. The violence is graphic and chilling, far too much and far too detailed for my
taste. The suffering is prolonged and prominent.
This portion of the novel, the reader is not unhappy to leave behind. No endearing
characters. No sentimental attachments. And less attachment to the rest of the book.
The book staggers to a close with "The New Exiles Of California." It's time for the
cycle to repeat. Time also to bring the separate segments of the novel together, but it
isn't that easy; the segues are too forced, the coincidences incredible. The attempt
to join the stories weakens the strength they each carry on their own.
Daniel's writing is strong. His ideas are original and compelling. Whether short
stories or novels are his forté, or if his talent extends to both forms, it is difficult
to judge based on Earthling. So, don't. Find yourself a copy of Warpath,
his previous novel. Or check out his short story "Life On The Moon."
You know how wrong first impressions can be.
(After all, I loved the first third of
Earthling.) Give Daniel another chance; maybe he's just not a "first-date
guy." Really, he's got a great personality.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
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