Saturday, June 16, 2007

Mastodonia by Clifford D. Simak (1978)

Hardback cover blurb

WELCOME TO MASTODONIA

Time-traveling turns into big business and big trouble when a causal walk down a farm path in a quiet Wisconsin town leads an archeologist into the Pleistocene era and he uncovers an interstellar mystery from before recorded time…

Asa Steel is unprepared for the incredible events that begin to unfold when Rila Elliot – a woman he loved two decades before – steps out of the past and his faithful dog Bowser starts loping into it through time trails he’s discovered in his own backyard.

Rila’s appearance is mere coincidence, but Bowser’s retrieval of fresh dinosaur bones is as inexplicable as is the curious crater in Asa’s backyard that seems to have been made by a spaceship from the stars.

And that’s only the beginning.

Soon Asa himself trips in time, led into prehistoric eras by an enigmatic cat-faced creature. Unable to communicate with his alien guide except though a local simpleton named Hiram, Asa attempts to understand the meaning and the purpose of these time trails. Meanwhile, Rila, always looking toward the future, arranges to turn them into one of the biggest money-making travel ventures of all time.

In short order, the time trails in the quiet town of Willow Bend become the focus of global attention, government scrutiny and the target for an unprecedented solution to overpopulation.

But from the moment the first modern men begin trekking back in time, there’s more danger, excitement and trouble than any of them would have ever bargained for.

My thoughts

Mastodonia, in my opinion, is a novel with an interesting idea that doesn’t have a story to realize its potential. That’s not to say it’s a bad book, because it will keep you entertained for the two or three evenings it takes to read through its short 200-or-so pages. But the author never quite figures out to do with the time travel device -- or, in this case, time-traveling alien -- he gives his protagonists.

The novel is narrated by Asa, who stumbles across a mystery in his own backyard when his dog starts hauling in fresh dinosaur bones. Once the mystery is solved, which happens about a third of the way through the novel, the rest of the story is about how Asa and his lover Rila exploit the discovery of time travel for their own personal gain. That’s what turned me off most about this work: Here we have two protagonists who make the greatest discovery in the history of mankind, yet they use it for their own selfish reasons and we, as readers, are supposed to be rooting for them. Perhaps I wasn’t feeling capitalist enough when I read it. Anyway, one of their first actions is to establish a nation in the prehistoric past called Mastodonia, mostly as a way to avoid paying taxes. The secret is soon out, and the couple starts offering trips to prehistory, but only for the super rich. We peasants must settle for the occasional photograph of a dinosaur or a sabertooth cat.

Mastodonia has some good moments, such as a couple trips back to the Mesozoic era, and it is light-hearted in tone, but there is really no direction to the story. Once the opening mystery is solved, Simak seems to be making it up as he goes, and the ending isn’t so much of an ending as a point to stop writing. Some people may appreciate this. After all, real life leaves loose ends and it doesn’t have tidy conclusions. But real life doesn’t have you discovering living mastodons in your backyard either. Mastodonia feels very much like a book rushed to meet a deadline.

Trivia

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Friday, June 8, 2007

List of reviews by author and editor last names

Go to: Novels / Anthologies / Art Books / Comics / Board Games & RPGs / Essays

Novels

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Anthologies

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Art books

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Comics

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Board Games/RPGS

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Essays

Thursday, June 7, 2007

The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1912)

Paperback cover blurb

Nests of pterodactyls, hordes of iguanodons, swarms of plesiosaurs still roaming the earth in the twentieth century? Professor Challenger says yes and to prove it he leads an expedition into the deepest jungles of South America. Together, the men – a young journalist, an adventurer, and an aristocrat – along with their bearers and guides, search for the rumored country and encounter savagery, hardship, and betrayal on the way. But things only get worse as they get closer to the hidden world they seek. Trapped on an isolated plateau, menaced by hungry carnosaurs, it begins to look as though the expedition may never return from…

THE LOST WORLD

* Blurb from 1993 edition by Tor Books.

My thoughts

Daily Gazette reporter Edward Malone is in love with Gladys, a shallow, spoiled woman who insists she must marry a hero. So Malone appeals to his editor to assign him to a great adventure, but what he instead gets is an assignment to interview one Professor George Edward Challenger, a menacing and ill-tempered scientist known for throwing reporters bodily into the street. Malone manages to win him over, however, and Challenger revels to the reporter his secret: he has found a “lost world” where dinosaurs have survived to the modern day.

The scientific community is skeptical about Challenger’s claims, but he still convinces them to mount an expedition to test his theories. Soon Challenger, Malone and two other English gentlemen – academic rival Professor Summerlee and great white hunter Lord John Roxton – are penetrating deep into the Amazonian rainforest toward a mystery the frightened natives call “Curupuri.”

The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is the granddaddy of paleontological fiction (although Jules Verne beat him to it) and in many ways it still remains among the best of the genre. Many clichés of later prehistoric pulp were first established here: the mixing of prehistoric animals from different eras; ape-men and dinosaurs living together; a “lost world” cut off from modern civilization. Doyle’s main character, Professor Challenger, is a fun creation nearly as entertaining as Sherlock Holmes, the author’s better-known hero. And Doyle strikes exactly the right balance between mystery, adventure and humor in a plot that never seems to have a dull moment.

Readers should be warned that The Lost World is very much a book of its times. Written around the turn of the 20th century, it’s laced with racism and sexism, and what is supposed to be the characters’ most heroic moment now comes off simply as genocide. Try to enjoy the novel for all the things it does right, but if these problems are still too much to put out of mind, look at it as a window into an era and a mindset that are now as thankfully extinct as the dinosaurs roaming its pages.

Trivia
  • The Lost World is the most adapted dinosaur story in history. The first dinosaur movie was based on it, and ever since there have been numerous movies, radio dramas, and even a TV series claiming its name.
Reviews