When we were little
kids and our parents and teachers urged us to flex
our imagination, they thought they were doing us
a favor -- and they were, under cover of daylight.
But where were they after dark, when we'd lie
stone awake and frozen with fear in our beds
after we'd read one of Ray Bradbury's
alien-spores-in-the-basement stories, under the
covers with the flashlight, or taken a Twilight
Zone episode much too close to heart? When we
reached adulthood, we convinced ourselves those
fears were just silly: The Twilight Zone sets
were cheesy, and Bradbury turned out to be not
nearly as scary as Richard Nixon.
But Jonathan Lethem is the kind of writer who
reassures us that none of those nights were spent
in vain: We had plenty to fear -- we just needed
those stories because they gave us something to
hook our terror onto. Girl in Landscape --
which could be called science fiction for those
who like that sort of thing, although it shouldn't
scare off those who don't -- uses the raw
materials of those fears (mysterious viruses that
change our perceptions; dry, spooky terrain that
looks like nothing so much as nightmare territory;
tiny, slimy creatures that grow inside of potatoes)
as a way of exploring both the awe of female
adolescent sexual awakening and the treachery of
it.
Pella Marsh is 13 when her mother dies and her
family -- including her ineffectual, failed-politician
father, Clement, and her two younger brothers --
leave the apocalyptic wasteland of Brooklyn and
strike out for a better life on the planet of the
Archbuilders. The Archbuilders -- double-jointed
creatures with bodies of fur, shell and leathery
skin -- had once built a great civilization but have
since fallen into a kind of lethargy. Their planet is
a parched wonderland of crumbled towers and
archways, a place where tiny giraffelike creatures
called household deer skitter and scamper across
the plains and in the corners of people's houses,
like mice. Among the small group of settlers on
the planet is Efram Nugent -- a loner, a bully and
an enigmatic presence who acts as if he knows
everything and sometimes really seems to. (The
character clearly resembles Ethan Edwards, John
Wayne's vengeful, nearly unhinged character in
The Searchers .) Pella is both attracted to and
repelled by Efram. To her, he represents a
jumble of conflicts: He's an arbiter of order in this
strange new world, an idiot grown-up who
doesn't know as much as he thinks he does and a
lightning rod for both her sexual bewilderment
and her half-conscious sense of her own allure.
Lethem tells Pella's story with the same lucidity
and unaffected elegance he brought to his 1997
novel As She Climbed Across the Table . And if
he's unflinching about probing the dark side of
Pella's transformation, he's also almost painfully
sympathetic to her, capturing the awkwardness a
young woman feels when she's getting ready to
fold up her girl self forever: "She moved toward
her father, slowly, giving him time to catch the
hint. He sat just in time, and she climbed into his
lap. She didn't really fit there, but she drew up
her knees and pretended. It was strange how
Efram had mistaken her for a grown woman even
as he towered over her, made her feel small.
Whereas Clement, with whom she was still
unquestionably a child, was nearly her same
size." And even when Lethem uses the language
of science fiction to shape his story, he doesn't
have to stretch to make his fantastic metaphors
work. He knows adolescence is its own kind of
weird tale, and if the fear of it wasn't exactly
what kept us awake all those childhood nights --
well, maybe it should have been. -- Salon
A surrealistic bildungsroman about a teenage girl unfolds among the ruins and frontier violence of a distant planet in Lethem's latest genre-bending exploration of science, landscape and the metaphysics of love and loss. As the novel opens, Pella Marsh, age 13, sets out from her subterranean home in a post-apocalyptic New York City for a final visit to Coney Island with her two younger brothers and her mother, Caitlinall sealed in bodysuits to keep out the cancerous sun. Pella's father, Clement, has just been swept out of elective office in New York and has set his sights on the next political frontier: joining the first human settlers on the Planet of the Archbuilders. When Caitlin suddenly succumbs to a brain tumor, Clement whisks the grieving children by space ship to the faraway planet. Once the domain of a super-evolved alien species who used "viruses" to alter their ecosystem before abandoning it, the planet is now a hothouse landscape of ruined towers and refuse inhabited only by skittery, mouselike "household deer" and a few remaining Archbuildersgentle, druidic creatures with furry, tendrilled, exoskeletal bodies and names like "Gelatinous Stand." Clement's mission, to forge a community that embraces the Archbuilders, puts him on a collision course with Ephram Nugent, a xenophobic homesteader who so closely resembles John Ford's John Wayne that one keeps expecting him to call Clement "Pilgrim." Lethem (As She Climbed Across the Table , 1997, etc.) affectingly chronicles Pella's tumultuous journey through puberty and loss and the knockabout society of children thrown together by their homesteading parents. As a result, this lyrical, often far-fetched meditation on the founding myths of the 21st century remains thoroughly rooted in an emotional world much closer to home.
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
An ingenious and unsettling dystopian romance from the surrealist wunderkind who has in a scant five years produced five aggressively original works of fiction (As She Climbed Across the Table , 1997, etc.). The story begins on Earthin Brooklyn, in factin a future transfigured by some unspecified (seemingly nuclear) catastrophe. The ozone layer is only a memory, people travel underground in private "subway cars," and beachgoers can tolerate the sun only when enclosed in protective portable "tents." These and similar phenomena emerge in some brilliantly managed expository scenes focussed on teenaged Pella Marsh and her two younger brothers as they endure the loss of their mother to a brain tumor and their removal (by father Clement, a defeated politician) to another planet. Arriving at a "new settlement" on the environmentally friendly Planet of the Archbuilders, the Marshalls gradually assimilate into a society of fugitive earthlings who coexist uneasily with their mysterious hosts. The Archbuilders, seemingly equal parts human, animal, and vegetable, pose a disturbing riddle: Are they benign protective beings evolved beyond humans (some of whom argue that they're only the "rubble" left behind by their more adventurous interstellar-explorer counterparts)? Or are these passive "aliens" a variety of lotus-eaters whose resignation to their stripped-down "planet" lulls their human neighbors into inert compliance with its norms? The possibilities are cleverly explored through a pleasingly melodramatic storyline that satisfies our expectations without overexplaining, and through a profusion of grimly comic details picturing life (or the imitation of it) in this bizarrenew world. And Lethem's people are fully as real as his locale seems unreal. The protagonist Pella, a sturdy girl-woman altogether equal to the tests she undergoes, is especially memorable. Wonderful stuff. One waits eagerly to learn where Lethem will take us next.