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New York Times summer science fiction picks

Cory Doctorow at 2:23 pm Fri, Jun 3, 2011

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Jeff VanderMeer sez, "My latest SF/F column for the New York Times Book Review is featured in their summer reading issue, and includes coverage of fantastic books by Jo Walton, Genevieve Valentine, Peter S. Beagle, and Lauren Beukes.
Science Fiction Chronicle "Among Others" purports to be the diary entries of 15-year-old Morwenna Phelps, but it is really a strong argument for the importance of books and reading. Set in the late 1970s in Wales and England, the novel follows Morwenna's adventures at boarding school after a car accident has left her with chronic injuries. Reunited with a father she barely knows, the solitary teenager discovers the joys of a weekly book club, acquires a boyfriend and is sent sinister photographs by a mother who blames her for the death of her twin sister. This may seem the stuff of routine teenage melodrama -- but Morwenna can see fairies, her mother is really an evil witch, and the car accident that injured her and killed her sister was part of a magical conflict. At one point a fairy tells her, cryptically, "Doing is doing." Echoing the novel's synthesis of the realistic and the supernatural, Morwenna takes him to mean that "it doesn't matter if it's magic or not, anything you do has power and consequences and affects other people." As she tries to come to terms with her sister's death through both books and fairy magic, the novel assumes true emotional resonance. A late confrontation with the mother, who disappears as a threat for many pages, seems anticlimactic by comparison. The real key to appreciating this novel can be found in an earlier passage, about the way our favorite writers become touchstones and guides as we navigate through life: "Tolkien understood about the things that happen after the end. Because this is after the end, this is all the Scouring of the Shire, this is figuring out how to live in the time that wasn't supposed to happen after the glorious last stand. I saved the world, or I think I did, . . . and it doesn't care about me any more than the Shire cared about Frodo." It's a brave act to write a novel that is in ­essence all aftermath, but Walton succeeds admirably. Her novel is a wonder and a joy.
I've reviewed some of Jeff's summer picks here: Zoo City, Among Others.

Science Fiction Chronicle (Warning: may use up one of your NYT paywall viewings)

(Thanks, Jeff!)

I write books. My latest is a YA science fiction novel called Homeland (it's the sequel to Little Brother). More books: Rapture of the Nerds (a novel, with Charlie Stross); With a Little Help (short stories); and The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow (novella and nonfic). I speak all over the place and I tweet and tumble, too.

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  • Ron Sullivan

    Oh, read the damned book. It’s a kick.

    And pull up your pants.

  • Zhiva

    “science fiction picks”
    “Morwenna can see fairies, her mother is really an evil witch, and the car accident that injured her and killed her sister was part of a magical conflict. ”

    Does not compute.

  • Anonymous

    I hated this book. I read rave reviews here and elsewhere so I was really looking forward to it but it’s 1) not science fiction and 2) has NO PLOT. The pacing is awful and it builds to a climax that never happens. Where is the love for this book coming from!?!

  • Dustin

    How is “Among Others” science fiction? It sounds like it doesn’t even try to pretend to be sci-fi like, for example, Dr. Who.

    • Wally Ballou

      Hear, hear, Dustin.

      Over the past couple of decades I have developed a fairly well-honed reflex through poring over the purported “science fiction” shelves of bookstores and libraries:

      01 Grasp book

      02 Examine jacket art and blurb

      03 Are there any
      fairies
      wizards
      magic
      vampires
      zombies
      TV/movie spinoffs

      04 If yes,
      reshelve book
      select new volume
      goto 01

      05 If no, continue to examine book for possible acquisition

      • Antinous / Moderator

        I don’t know how they figure out those categories. Urban fantasy goes in the general fiction section, but fantasy goes in SF. Is it based on population density?

        • Antinous / Moderator

          Now that I think about it, Harry Potter is in SF and Harry Dresden is in Fiction. Is it the presence or absence of dragons?

  • jcolvin

    How about a few science fiction picks?

  • Anonymous

    Goodnight Johnboy!!!

  • Patrick Nielsen Hayden

    Among Others is a fantasy novel that is about, among other things, science fiction.