The Time of Quarantine | |||||
Katharine Haake | |||||
What Books Press, 294 pages | |||||
A review by Seamus Sweeney
There are various reasons for this. The apocalyptic strain in Western thought is strong, and one that persists even if
the explicitly religious element declines (some might say it gets even stronger). Post-apocalyptic fictions clearly tend to
involve critiques of contemporary society, and don't exactly mark an endorsement of the sunny uplift of scientific
progress. The post-apocalyptic also involves a stripping down of society to a kind of elemental state, and one in which the
messiness of everyday modern life is reduced to a certain essence.
All of this is grist to the mill of the modern literary imagination. Plus the daily news -- climate change, Manichean debates
between self-professedly polar political opposites that increasingly take on the tenor and rhetoric of wars of religion -- is
itself the stuff of apocalypse.
The opening chapters which form a prologue, are hauntingly written. We are introduced to Peter, the seemingly solitary boy, the
lone resident of an Intentional Community in Northern California, maintaining the machines that keep the near-deserted
community going and keeps him alive just as his father directed him. Some kind of environmental catastrophe denuded the colony of humans.
There is some wonderful nature writing as well as the more purely dystopian elements. Indeed, Katharine Haake often capture the
dislocation any of us can have if we spend time -- even a short time -- alone away from urbanity -- even a very tame wilderness.
Themes of growth, rebirth, renewal, and stuntedness, silence and betrayal echo and re-echo through the book. Sometimes
the more "literary" apocalyptic fiction tends towards a certain level of abstraction and telling-rather-than-showing, which
I found in this case particularly marked in the sections immediately following the prologue. I wonder if some readers may
find some passages surfeited with longeurs. However Haake has created a story which is worthy of being called a genuine
piece of literary art. A hoary old cliché about speculative fiction is that it reflects the contemporary anxieties
and hopes of its time to a greater degree than it tells us about the future. In this case, the cliché is quite true.
Seamus Sweeney is a freelance writer and medical graduate from Ireland. He has written stories and other pieces for the website Nthposition.com and other publications. He is the winner of the 2010 Molly Keane Prize. He has also written academic articles as Seamus Mac Suibhne. |
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