Not of Woman Born | ||||||||||
edited by Constance Ash | ||||||||||
Roc Books, 272 pages | ||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Some of these new methods may take you by surprise, but Constance Ash and her herd of
authors are already putting aside money for their neuvo-neonates' college tuition. If
there's a high-tech way to reproduce, chances are it's covered in
Not of Woman Born. And covered well.
Ease your way into this area with some bizarre and quirky tales of science gone
overboard. Enjoy the insanity of "One Day At Central Convenience Mall" by Nina
Kiriki Hoffman, and wonder if this technique isn't already in practice at your
local galleria. Didn't you see a news story on E! that was eerily like "Doppels"? And
don't start spending that big advance until after you check out Kara Dalkey's
"Bouncing Babies." Sure, they're all kind of nightmarish, but you can look ahead to it and laugh.
In the mood for something a little bit more... chilling? Follow the path of the Great
White Hunter into what is left of Africa in Ash's "The Leopard's Garden" a horrifying
glimpse of a decimated Earth and the drive to repopulate. Ponder the nature of human
taboos and the law of the jungle with a bio-engineered scientist and loving son in
Sage Walker's unsettling outer space tale, "Hunting Mother."
No one said it was all going to be sweet and sunny.
In a more somber vein, two stories explore the emotional toll of selective
reproduction. Can a young woman work out all of her problems with her mother, if
she just gets a second chance? Janni Lee Simner probes one painful relationship in
her heartbreaking tale, "Raising Jenny," that is far too accurate for comfort. The
search for perfect offspring carries its own pain and loss, in Walter Jon Williams' "Daddy's World."
The stories are every bit as diverse as you would expect from looking at the list
of authors. And this is only at the fiction stage; what will it be like when all
of these inventions are actually options? Pro-Life and Pro-Choice debates will
become infinitely more intricate when reproduction takes place outside the
human body. (Will they start bombing test tube manufacturers, then? Send
snipers after egg donors? Oh, the... humanity, I guess.)
What a relief to imagine a future where hyper-fertile people don't try to
have children by the litter. And every infant has a chance to be whole and healthy.
It may well be the number one topic in the new millennium. You might as well get a jump start on the questions, now. Open your
eyes and your mind to the possibilities. There is no better way to do it than
with the precious, and semi-precious, gems in this anthology. And, it won't hurt a bit.
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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