The Thrill of the Series

TODAY: Classic Speculative Fiction Series

The first of three posts: Classic series (today), Some of my Favorites, Problem series

ONE THING: A series of stories set in that world, so I have the illusion, at least, that I’ll never have to leave it.

For me the reader, this accounts for the appeal of a book series. For me the writer, it also accounts for that appeal. For me the writer, I’ll live in my book world a lot longer than any reader, because it will keep populating in my imagination, and I’ll have time to write only some of that down. But I’ll have all of it in my head.

Speculative fiction especially grabs its readers through series. I feel like I should do a lot more reading before I write this post and two more related posts about speculative fiction series. So many books. . .so little time!

SOME OF THE CLASSICS

The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien

Source: the Tolkien Society web site, photographer Pamela Chandler

Tolkien (1892-1973) is the man who wrote the epic fantasy series that started modern-day fantasy. The Lord of the Rings trilogy is totally immersive and hugely influential. The writing is not my favorite, but that hardly matters. Peter Jackson made wonderful movies of the three main volumes (psst, originally written as one mammoth volume, in case you’re wondering why the first and second just stop cold), and Tolkien produced tons of other material that you could think of as series-adjacent. The Tolkien universe is so huge and complex that only its most avid fans know how to thread through it all, from The Hobbit, a beloved children’s book, all the way to a multitude of related books and stories that only the initiate know about. Here’s a helpful web site if you need a guide. Tolkien himself was a fascinating man. He was a celebrated scholar of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University, the man who brought Beowulf to the attention of the world. He populated his worlds of imagination from his scholarly knowledge and his lifelong fascination with languages, building his fantasy world from the inside out. “Here’s an interesting way language could work, and here’s an interesting potential language that could come out of that. Now, what kind of people would speak such a language, and what kind of world would they live in?” That seemed to have been his thinking. His military service in World War I and his ardent Roman Catholicism also shaped his writing. For a quick read, learn more through the Tolkien Society, and for a deep dive, get Humphrey Carpenter’s 1977 biography. Carpenter also wrote an interesting book about Tolkien and the Inklings, his literary circle: The Inklings: C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, Charles Williams and Their Friends (1979).

The Chronicles of Narnia, C. S. Lewis

The most famous of the Narnia books. Find them all here.

Lewis (1898-1963) was Tolkien’s friend, academic colleague, and fellow Inkling. The Narnia books, like Tolkien’s The Hobbit, are notable classics of children’s literature. The first, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, has been a must-read for generations of children, their gateway (wardrobe portal?) into fantasy. With a few exceptions, the other six novels are rather preachy and Christian-apologetic. Lewis was a great scholar of Renaissance English literature, the man who almost single-handedly resurrected literary interest in Edmund Spenser and John Milton (very important to me personally, since that’s my academic field). He also wrote a lot of religious tract-like material beloved of the Religious Right, although he was a faithful Anglican his whole life. Some Religious Right outfit made pretty bad movies from several of the books in the series, but fans can hope Greta Gerwig’s Narnia streaming series gets off the ground. The reading order of the Narnia books isn’t quite as complicated as for Tolkien’s entire body of fantasy work, but it does have its complications. There are two ways to do it: chronologically according to story line, or by publication date. Here is a helpful guide. Unlike Tolkien, and more like most fantasy writers, Lewis wrote from the outside in. He imagined his fantasy world, and then he fleshed it out. The way he was led to do that has roots in his childhood and relationship with his much-loved older brother. Humphrey Carpenter’s book about the Inklings (see above) is a good place to start if you want to do a deep dive, and so is Jack: A Life of C. S. Lewis, by George Sayer. For a quick unbiased overview, see the official C. S. Lewis web site. An evangelical Christian take on Lewis can be found here or here or here. His own book, Surprised by Joy, is a good introduction to both his life and his religious beliefs. The film Shadowlands (1993) explores many of these issues and is really well-done. It was based on a stage play and an earlier BBC televised production which might be even better than the more well-known Anthony Hopkins-Debra Winger film. Mark Saint-Germaine’s 2009 play Freud’s Last Session, imagining a meeting and debate between Sigmund Freud and Lewis, is really great, too, if you ever have a chance to see it. I was lucky enough to attend an off-Broadway production. Lewis wrote prolifically about religious subjects, but he did write other fiction, including an SF series for adults, the Space Trilogy, which is even more indebted to ideas from Spenser and Milton than the Narnia books–not to mention a big academic controversy of the day.

The Time Quintet, Madeleine L’Engle

Image in the public domain, accessed through Wikimedia Commons

A Wrinkle in Time, an SF book for young adults, had a hard road to publication, especially since most SF books of the time did not have female main characters. It went on to win the Newbery Medal among many other awards, and its author, Madeleine L’Engle (1918-2007), wrote four sequels: A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, Many Waters, and An Acceptable Time. L’Engle wrote a second, related series and other novels exploring similar ground. Like Lewis, L’Engle was a committed Christian and attended mostly Episcopal churches (The Episcopal Church being the U.S. branch of Anglicanism). She was especially associated with the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine in Manhattan. Her books explore religious themes congruent with her belief in Christian universalism. I don’t find them as preachy and doctrinaire as the Narnia books, but then my own ideas about religion tilt more in her direction than in his. Some evangelical readers find L’Engle’s books offensive because of her universalism. I think they are great books for young girls to read–an intelligent and spunky young girl is the main character, and L’Engle’s religious ideas are expansive and generous. That’s just me. You, Reader, can make up your own mind. The first of these novels was made into a sadly unsuccessful movie. Learn more about L’Engle by visiting her official web site. Her obituary in the Times of London, accessed through the Wayback machine, is a good way to find out more as well.

The Hainish Cycle, Ursula LeGuin

LeGuin (1929-2018) wrote deeply-involving novels with convincing and fascinating anthropological underpinnings. The daughter of an anthropologist and a writer, she pioneered soft SF, less concerned with hardware and technology, more concerned with imagining different cultures. Her writing is brilliant, lauded by the literary world in general as well as within speculative fiction. The Left Hand of Darkness (1969), one of the Hainish SF novels, won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1970 and is one of the best, most affecting books I have ever read. She wrote many other kinds of books, including the beloved coming-of-age fantasy novel A Wizard of Earthsea (1968), the children’s series Catwings, the brilliant short story “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelos,” and more. She must hold some kind of record for the number of her major speculative fiction awards–Hugo, Locus, Nebula, others–during a lifetime of influential and highly acclaimed writing. She was heavily influenced by ideas from anthropology and sociology and by Jungian and Taoist thought. She incorporated feminist ideas about gender and sexuality into her writing well before most were very well-informed about such matters, and crusaded for political tolerance and the rights of authors steamrolled by big publishing companies and platforms (See this and this). Learn more through her official web site. The influential literary critic Harold Bloom wrote a detailed critique of her work, which he hugely admired.

Foundation, Isaac Asimov

Original cover of the first book, 1951

Asimov (1920-1992) was a scientist educated at Columbia University, with a professorship at Boston University, and he poured his knowledge and varied interests into his SF books, some of the best from the Golden Age of SF. The Foundation trilogy won a 1966 Hugo award as best all-time series. Asimov followed the trilogy up with further Foundation novels organized in a number of related series. A streaming series was based on his Foundation world-building. Here’s a terrible confession: I have never been able to get through the Foundation novels. I will say there are standalone Asimov books I’ve loved, especially a deep fondness for Pebble in the Sky (1950) and The Stars, Like Dust (1951)–and I admired but found flawed The Gods Themselves, which won the 1972 Hugo, Nebula, and Locus Awards in a boffo trifecta. Whatever I may think, Asimov’s influence on speculative fiction was and remains immense and his output, prolific. His envisioning of a galaxy-wide empire is the precursor to many another SF book or series of books–and movies and all the rest–world-building that features a galactic empire and its wide-ranging conflicts. Asimov has said he was inspired by Gibbons’s Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and Thucydides’s history of the Peloponnesian War. Among several other terms he invented, the word “robotics” is probably the most well-known and widely used, and he was a true Renaissance man, writing academic science, popular science, mystery, children’s books, popular history, dirty limericks, and on and on. Hmm, maybe we should conduct a contest to see whether his number of speculative fiction awards beats out Ursula LeGuin’s. He has an impressive list of them. His political views and his behavior frequently roused controversy. To learn more about Asimov, you can’t do better than heading to this web site.

The Dune Saga, Frank Herbert

Find it here.

After a career in journalism, the largely self-taught Herbert (1920-1986) began selling stories to SF magazines. With his ground-breaking novel Dune (1965), he achieved fame as one of the New Wave of SF writers. The structure of Dune is innovative–episodes of adventure involving the novel’s main character are interspersed with purported anthropological, historical, and ecological accounts of the culture of his planet, part of a far-flung galactic empire. I found this first book of the series pretty brilliant, with its invented history/anthropology sandwiched between thrilling action sequences. It won the 1965 Nebula award and shared the Hugo in 1966. I could barely get through the next in the series, Dune Messiah, and I didn’t bother reading the other four sequels, the writing was so bad. But many readers love them. You may be among those fans. He died before he could finish the last in the series. Whatever you think about it, the Dune saga is a hugely influential SF series, with innovative world-building and a forward-thinking emphasis on ecology, one of Herbert’s lifelong passions. The Dune universe has tempted several different movie-makers to have a go at it. The latest films, directed by Denis Villeneuve, divided the first book into two parts and have been extremely successful. The second book of the series, Dune Messiah, is in the early stages of production, although it will be the third in the film trilogy. Villeneuve says he won’t go past that book to any later books in the series, which I think is a wise choice. I enjoyed the first of Villeneuve’s films very much, but the second only so-so. (No, really–were you convinced by Timothée Chalamet and Austin Butler going at it as supposedly the best fighters in the universe? Me neither.) But people keep trying to make movies out of this material. Even the crazy 1984 David Lynch version has its rabid fans. Herbert, a complicated man, opposed the Viet Nam War but was a lifelong Republican. Many would call him libertarian. For more about Herbert and the Dune saga, see this web site maintained by his son Brian Herbert and Kevin Anderson. The two have collaborated on fiction that furthers the Dune universe.

Color My Speculative Fiction GREEN

Now that the planet is burning up, it’s no accident that novelists are writing about it–especially as devastating fires sweep down on the LA area while I’m writing this post.

Thanks to beasternchen from Pixabay for this free-to-publish image.

Completely understandable we’re using speculative fiction to explore climate collapse and ecological destruction. Fictions of all types, written, imagistic, patternings of all kinds such as poetic and musical, cinematic, gamer (fun and serious), even legal, even (one might argue) scientific hypotheses, illustrate a common human defensive practice. We try out thoughts, emotions, habits of thinking, situations by using a speculative microcosm, a little laboratory. We build an imaginary world, peer into it, maybe find ourselves entertained by it, but always, even if we are barely aware of it, use it to understand and comfort ourselves, even find solutions to our distress. In the best, most immersive fictional experiences, we discover empathy. Through this human impulse to explore the “little world” of the fiction, we encounter reality in the larger world, and (given the evidence of the Lascaux cave paintings of the Upper Paleolithic and similar finds) we always have.

Novelists as well as writers and creators in other forms increasingly turn to the type of speculative fiction variously termed eco-lit, ecology literature, green literature–to mention a few of its labels. True, all fiction is speculative. A lot of eco-lit is “realistic,” mimicking life as experienced by real people in real historical moments and real places. I’m thinking of Ann Pancake’s Strange as This Weather Has Been (2007), a novel about communal and family breakdown in Appalachia as mountain-top removal mining destroys not only the physical environment but a way of life. An earlier example, Peter Matthiessen’s At Play in the Fields of the Lord (1965), shows the damage a technologically advanced and arrogant culture can do to an indigenous culture and its life-giving environment. One of the most powerful recent books in this vein is the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Overstory, by Richard Powers.

Readers and publishers categorize other recent compelling eco-lit– novels, films, and storytelling in other media ( such as The Last of Us and Fallout 76–video games translated into long-form streaming series)–as speculative fiction. This is speculative fiction as it is usually understood, especially dystopian fiction and science fiction (the sub-genre sometimes snarkily referred to as Cli-Fi). These fictions may be set on a near-future earth under threat of climate collapse, or on other planets, or in the far-future. Environmental disaster in these fictional settings can be either the main problem or the consequences of a different problem (nuclear war, for example). If you’re looking for a good list of green-lit/eco-lit novels to read, you might start with the one published by The Guardian in 2020. It’s a bit dated now, but this is a great list. And here is a wonderful eco-lit web site.

Here are six very compelling speculative eco-lit novels–three older novels that have become classics of the genre, and three more recent novels. Of course there are many others. The ones on this list are all superb, and they all address environmental issues, all in different ways. I haven’t posted here in a while–reading other kinds of stuff. It’s time for some speculative fiction!

Take a look at my mini-reviews of these books and the other sources I’ve listed, and other lists of great eco-fiction. Then get reading.

There are many more of these eco-themed speculative novels to read and ponder. Older novels such as J.C. Ballard’s fever-dream of a book, The Drowned World (beware repellant racial stereotypes, though–and its misogyny–never have I encountered a more passive, purely decorative heroine). Newer novels such as Omar El Akkad’s American War. More coming all the time. With the hurricane damage, the fire damage, the inundation of our coastal areas, it’s past time to think deeply about these matters, and fiction–although no substitute for determined action to change the world–is one of the ways we can try out these ideas most empathetically, even energize ourselves for direct action.

Here’s my list:

  • Ursula LeGuin, The Word for World is Forest (1972)
  • Octavia Butler, The Parable of the Sower (1993)
  • Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake (2003)
  • Paolo Bacigalupi, The Water Knife (2016)
  • Kim Stanley Robinson, The Ministry for the Future (2020)
  • Annalee Newitz, The Terraformers (2023)

Earlier novels . . .

Ursula LeGuin, The Word for World is Forest (1972)

Find it on Amazon. First published in 1973 by Doubleday.

The matchless Ursula LeGuin wrote this Hugo Award-winning novella in the ’70s. It’s a quick read incorporating many of the themes of her longer novels: clash of cultures, encountering “the other,” and in this book especially, the devastating impact of colonialism on environment. In this novel, an encroaching, colonizing civilization possesses advanced technology able to overwhelm a colonized world without that technological advantage. In this prescient novel, the civilization with the advanced technology is out to destroy its victim’s environment for profit. It’s not a fair fight.

I say prescient, but of course the novel looks backward as well. I’m thinking of the chapter in Jared Diamond’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Guns, Germs, and Steel explaining how in 1532 the Spaniard Francisco Pizarro and his band of only hundreds, with hardly any damage to themselves, could take over the massive Inca civilization. They employed powerful technological advantages–the gun and the domesticated horse–for the ultimate enrichment of Spain. Weird to think of a horse as “technology,” I know, but read Diamond’s book–so interesting despite flaws of overstatement and overgeneralization.

LeGuin’s short novel is part of her Hainish cycle, published between her masterpieces The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed.

Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower (1993)

Find it on Amazon. First published in 1993.

Butler’s profoundly moving dystopian novel is the tale of a young “empath” (a person who preternaturally feels others’ pain as if experiencing it herself) who lives in a near-future gated community outside Los Angeles. The carefully maintained defenses of the “haves” fall to the desperation of the “have-nots.” Fleeing as her relatively safe home succumbs to violence, the main character, Lauren Olamina, makes her way north through a ravaged environment. She marries a charismatic man working for a more just society. Together they establish the utopian community Acorn on principles that Lauren envisions, a new religion she calls Earthseed. The novel not only explores the consequences of climate change on the environment but especially the socioeconomic pressures of social injustice exacerbated by climate change. One of those near-future dystopian novels that makes us cringe the more Butler’s predictions mirror present-day circumstances.

Margaret Atwood, Oryx and Crake (2003)

Find it HERE. First published in 2003.

Some critics loved this book when it was first published. Others were dismissive. I thought it was brilliant when I first read it. Re-readings have only made me admire it more. People think of The Handmaid’s Tale as Atwood’s most prophetic novel (which, interestingly, has a climate-collapse backstory). Oryx and Crake rivals that novel’s prescience. Sadly, Oryx and Crake holds the distinction of being one of the most banned books in American schools. Dystopia is already here, folks. Keep ’em ignorant and maybe they won’t notice their whole world is collapsing.

Oryx and Crake is a novel about a future America devastated by environmental collapse caused by corporate greed, misplaced use of advanced technology in the service of that greed, and disinformation designed to cover up the impending devastation. Sound familiar? It also anticipates a certain Big Pharma scandal involving a company distributing and heavily promoting drugs causing a terrifying health crisis that benefits the company more and more handsomely the more they deny their role in creating it. Sound familiar?

When the novel begins, the narrator is one of the last humans alive–as far as he knows, the very last. Not so the terrifying genetically engineered creatures escaped from their controlled experiments, now thriving in the wild and hunting him. Their savagery is matched only by the savagery of the environment in which he is slowly starving to death. It’s a novel about the price paid by a society valuing STEM training unchecked by education in the humanities, a society where greed runs rampant over any sort of morality, technology trumps human empathy. In a really intriguing way, Oryx and Crake is also a Robinsonade. It’s a wonderful novel. Everyone should read it, especially kids in school. Apparently a bunch of school boards disagree with me there.

Many readers love the sequel, Year of the Flood, even more (maybe better called a companion book, because it involves different characters). I love them both but Oryx and Crake most. Unfortunately the much-later-written third novel in the trilogy, MaddAddam, doesn’t really measure up, although it does connect some dots and tie up some narrative threads.

On to more recent novels. . .

Paolo Bacigalupi, The Water Knife (2016)

Find it HERE.

At first gasp, Bacigalupi’s novel is a thriller that just happens to be set in the near-future and just happens to involve a horrific fight over water rights in the intermountain West. The PR for the novel calls it Mad Max meets Chinatown. The Mad Max part not so much, I’m thinking. The novel doesn’t present a post-apocalyptic landscape resembling Mars but a credibly and terribly degraded version of what we see around us every day. I’d say the novel is Breaking Bad meets Chinatown, with water instead of crystal meth the substance so desired people will kill for it and betray their best friends for it in the most vicious and depraved ways. There’s the same sense of impending dread and violence, the same sickening spiral into actual and incredibly sadistic violence. At one point, I was so disturbed I had to stop reading.

I found the novel a bit hard to get into. The first half hops from character to character to character so fast the novel feels out of focus. Midway through, though, the story finds its footing. I buckled up for a wild and violent ride. I ended up liking the novel although not just loving it. I found the characters interesting but a bit too brittle and unlikeable. If you read it, you may disagree, especially if you are a fan of the suspense-thriller genre (as I am not) with its hard-boiled, hard-nosed macho characters. But I CAN like such a read. Or show. I’m thinking of Breaking Bad again–we WANT to like Walter White, even when he turns out to be a monster. Who is a more compelling (can I say relatable? and at the same time monstrous?) character than Gus Fring? I still want to know more about his back-story. And don’t get me started on Better Call Saul, different but equally superb. I’m not sure whether Bryan Cranston or Bob Odenkirk is more revered around here. Vince Gilligan for sure. Which brings me to. . .

For me, the most relatable thing about The Water Knife is not its characters but its setting, both the physical setting and the political and socioeconomic backdrop. I’m perched right now in the Sandia Mountains of New Mexico just east of Albuquerque, where I spend about a third of my time, thinking how the LA fires could have as easily started here. How, if they did, all of us up here would be (literally) toast. I’m sitting here thinking about the politics of the Colorado River and who controls its water, with New Mexico apparently the last-stop step-sister of the Colorado River Compact. I’m thinking about how I drive by the settings for Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul every day, and how the news suggests those violent series have not strayed far from the truth. I’m thinking about recent natural disasters–the LA fires, the hurricane devastation in the Appalachians, and all the rest–and how tied they are to climate change, how much fuel for disinformation they occasioned and still are, how much distrust in the federal government is building because of it, how much finger-pointing is going on, how dangerously states seem to be pitted against states these days.

The Water Knife deals with all of these issues, especially the Balkanization of the U.S. into warring, barricaded combat zones beholden to near-feudal billionaire overlords or well-heeled absentee landlords from other nation-states. Meanwhile, a weakened federal government is powerless to stop the carnage. Bottom line: The Water Knife isn’t some illustrated filled-out Powerpoint with cardboard characters, like some other novels based on contemporary problems. It is a powerful, important book that really rewards the reading.

Kim Stanley Robinson, The Ministry for the Future (2020)

Find it HERE.

Whew. Where can I even start? This book is a must-read. The opening is one of the most horrific I’ve ever read. Strangely, you can’t call this near-future novel dystopian, because it presents a hopeful message. The conditions of the plot are about as dystopian as it gets, though.

The novel begins with a major heat wave in India that kills twenty million people, a scale almost impossible to imagine. We see this scene from the close-in perspective of a humanitarian aid worker devastated and irrevocably changed by his experience as one of the few survivors. He sets out to assassinate a highly-placed member of an international agency charged with the near-impossible task of mitigating the increasing, increasingly terrible climate disasters assailing the world. As the planet careens past its tipping point, both characters–the aid worker and his target–are changed and deepened.

I love character-driven fiction, and I love Robinson’s characters. Read as many of his books as you can get your hands on! His characters always seem completely human, flaws and all. Flawed human beings living through dangerous times on a damaged planet heading for ultimate disaster–a thrilling if sobering read.

The Los Angeles Review of Books calls this novel Robinson’s grimmest, and “not an easy read” (I tore through it, myself) and Robinson, nevertheless, as “our culture’s last great utopian.” The reviewer takes issue with Robinson’s method. In a manner reminiscent of Dos Passos, Robinson interlards the plot with snippets of many different types of writing–newspaper accounts, bureaucratic reports, and the like. I don’t know–I went with it. The characters seemed real to me and because of this method, the world-building did too. In clumsier hands, it wouldn’t have worked. But Robinson is not a clumsy writer.

Stephen Frug’s review of the novel also critiques its modernist collage of narrative types but concludes that The Ministry for the Future is above all a political novel. That seems on the nose to me. Frug’s most interesting charge, though, is that by setting his novel in the very near future, Robinson risked real events outrunning the fictional ones–which, Frug persuasively argues, is exactly what has happened. Robinson’s novel, as Frug points out, deals very little with the actual political and social forces opposing climate action right now–yet surely those forces would have played an outsized role if the events of the novel were taking place in the contemporary world. And here it comes, people–the near-future, rapidly turning into the present.

I loved Robinson’s novel anyway. I am in good company. In 2020, Barack Obama called it one of his favorite books of the year. Mr. Obama is a reader I really trust, too. Other books on his list are Jack, by the inimitable Marilynne Robinson (no kin to Kim Stanley–and good lord, read ALL of her books), as well as James MacBride’s amazing Deacon King Kong (read all of his). So I stand by my opinion.

Annalee Newitz, The Terraformers (2023)

Find it HERE.

Bacigalupi’s novel is set in the near-future on Planet Earth. Robinson’s is set in the scary REALLY near-future. But Newitz’s novel is set in the far-future, and not even on our own planet. It is still one of the most compelling examples of eco-fiction I’ve read. Talk about using a fictional world as a laboratory for ours. The politics of this novel, the use of bureaucratic regulations as a tool for ecological repair while others are using it as a weapon of ecological destruction–amazing.

I actually reviewed this novel this summer, when I was reading as many of the short-listed novels for the big speculative fiction prizes as I could. See my review here. Newitz’s novel was short-listed for the 2024 Nebula Award. Although it didn’t win, I thought it was marvelous, all the more since it’s a novel that really shouldn’t work as a novel–it covers a thousand years in the terraforming of a planet. Novels really are about character, one of their signature traits, and you’d think if a writer wanted to explore a time period that long, involving a thousand years’ worth of characters, the writer should maybe break down and write nonfiction instead. This novel works, though. The characters are marvelous, perhaps because the planet itself becomes the main character. I won’t go on and on about this great novel. I could! But I already did, so please see my earlier review. Damn, Newitz’s novel should have won an award.

MORE BOOKS!

Just the same, the novels that did win several of those awards had a climate focus, too, and they are just terrific. I could have posted reviews of them here too, especially The Saint of Bright Doors, by Vajra Chandrasekera, The Mountain in the Sea, by Ray Nayler, and In Ascension, by Martin MacInnes. In fact, I already did. See those reviews in my earlier posts, too, and read the novels. They are great!

Two More for the Hugos

In a previous post, I gave pocket reviews of four novels short-listed for the 2024 Hugo Award for best novel. Earlier, I had posted more extensive reviews. That’s because those four novels had already been short-listed for the 2024 Nebula, Locus, and Arthur C. Clarke awards, and two of them had won awards from those organizations. This year’s Hugo Awards committee selected two more novels to short-list:

  • The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty (Harper Voyager, Harper Voyager UK)
  • Starter Villain by John Scalzi (Tor, Tor UK)

Here are my reviews for both:

The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty (Harper Voyager, Harper Voyager UK)

Find out more HERE.

This novel is a fine swashbuckling pirate adventure full of magical creatures, good humor, and a colorful main character who describes herself as “a criminal, a sinner, a foul-mouthed middle-aged woman with a bad knee.” Sent on a dangerous quest by a rich and powerful noblewoman, the pirate Amina al-Sirafi reunites with her treacherous demon husband and sails the seas like Sinbad.  I loved the background of this novel, set in the Horn of Africa, the Indian Ocean, and other similar places, with its polyglot cast of characters. I love the idea of a novel that blithely sails past ageism, ableism, northern European fantasy tropes, and stodgy gender norms to pilot its own rolicking path. I’m really no judge, but the authentic feel of the Islamic culture lends depth and sincerity to the tale. I liked this novel as well as the first volume of the author’s popular Daevabad Trilogy–maybe better–and a lot better than the other two volumes in that trilogy.

I could easily see this book winning the Hugo Award for best novel of 2024. Do I think it is better than one of the other short-listed novels, Vajra Chandrasekera’s The Saint of Bright Doors, which won the Nebula for best novel and the Locus for best novel by a first-time author? I don’t. However, to say that is to compare apples to oranges. The Saint of Bright Doors is a serious book about deep problems of urbanization, government malfeasance, corrupt politics, cults of personality run amuck, and the like, while The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi is a delightful romp through a Sinbad the Sailor world. I’m not saying Chakraborty’s book is a lightweight–not at all. But I’m thinking awards committees frequently tilt toward the book that possesses the gravitas. Whatever. I loved The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi. What a book! What a read!

Starter Villain by John Scalzi (Tor, Tor UK)

Find out more HERE.

Another delightful read! This one reminds me quite a bit of Matt Dinniman’s indie-published LitRPG novel Dungeon Crawler Carl in its use of cat characters who upstage all the humans. The voice is really fun–a down and out man tells his own story. He has inherited his mysterious uncle’s business. Turns out the uncle was a super-villain, so the main character, who has never had a violent moment in his day, must exhibit the necessary chops. Lucky for him, the cats are in his corner. I enjoyed every page of this novel. In fact, I laughed out loud through most of it. It did seem a bit rushed at the end, though–as if, having created this marvelous set-up, the author couldn’t quite figure out how it should all go down. I thought about that. Then I put my no-doubt brilliant critical insight aside. Who cares about that when you’re having so much fun?

That wraps up all my reviews for the Hugo short-listed novels. Now it’s only a matter of waiting for the judges’ decision, which should come down any time now. In the meantime, if you haven’t read all of these books, get going! They are all great, and some of them are great fun.