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16 - Winterlong: Elizabeth Hand at the End of the World

from III - The Reviews

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Summary

The ocean wrinkled, darkened to indigo as the image shifted. I saw a long line of blackened crags emerging from the water like knots of charred bone, some of them smoking as though racked by volcanic activity. Another string of letters and numerals appeared—

LAT 02 10’ 5-LONG 114 44E, CONFIG 9743

PRIOR STATUS: JAWA

‘Where is this?’ I asked with dread.

‘Jawa’ the scholiast murmured.

I shook my head in disbelief. ‘But it's gone. There's nothing there’…

I was eleven. I was spending my customary winter weeks in bed. (My health improved, but I was twenty-five before I felt normal without a partial hibernation.) I had read the first volume of a wonderful adventure. My mother came into the room with new library books—that magical yet somehow threatening apparition—after the long hours alone (for years my favourite story of all time was Ray Bradbury's ‘The Emissary’). I saw the dingy olive grey spine of a tall, quarto volume. I can still feel the crushing disappointment: she's brought the same book back again. My God, no. She hadn't. It was Volume Two, The Two Towers. Take me away. Carry me away. Leave the meat behind.

In my devouring need for more of the stuff that made me high, I didn't notice I was rushing towards destruction. Other dramas close in media res, with a wedding or a funeral. The modern novel may drift off in inconclusion. Once the vital tension is broken a Fantasy series can amble away into soap-opera, as happens in countless Tolkien imitations. A trilogy is a world. This is true of any fiction, not only the overtly fantastic. At the end of the third volume, the world ends. It must.

‘The Ascendant Autocracy at Vancouver mistakenly believed the tsunami that destroyed their holdings at Araboth was the result of an Emirate attack. On twenty June O.S.C they sent twenty thousand troops to attack the Emirate's city of Tarabulus. Emirate troops retaliated with protonic weapons of intervention directed at Jawa.’ The image flickered and changed to a close up, empty turquoise waters flecked with gold and white beneath the remorseless sun.

Type
Chapter
Information
Deconstructing the Starships
Science, Fiction and Reality
, pp. 168 - 177
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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