| Girl In Landscape | |||||||||||
| Jonathan Lethem | |||||||||||
| Doubleday Books, 208 pages | |||||||||||
|
A review by Lisa DuMond
You will find Girl In Landscape is as far-removed from As She Climbed Across The Table, Lethem's
most recent novel, as it is from his debut novel, Gun, With Occasional Music. Hard-boiled, defrosted
detectives made room for hallucinogenic time-warps, which gave way to obsessed physicists, and then moved on to the foreign
territory of adolescents and other aliens. All without a misstep or fumbled subplot.
The girl in Girl In Landscape is thirteen-year-old Pella Marsh, and she has a problem. For no good reason
that she can come up with, she and her family are leaving Earth to resettle on the Planet of the
Archbuilders. True, Earth is a dying planet, trapped in its own pollution and unsafe for surface
dwelling, but it is HOME. A home her family is leaving, she suspects, because of her father's failed career.
Despite Pella's protests and a family tragedy, the move is on. The Planet of the Archbuilders, with its
countless, pointless structures, is a huge playground for the Marsh children and the gang they are instantly
absorbed into. An arid landscape, populated with the remnants of the great Archbuilders' race, laced
with the aliens' strange food source, it sustains
an even odder mix of expatriate humans.
What happened to the ancient race? Are they harmless simpletons, or something more sinister. And what will
happen to the Marsh family when they refuse the "antidote" for Archbuilder sickness? Are the human settlers still truly human?
These questions -- seen through Pella's eyes -- are partially answered, in Lethem's dexterous style. The full
truth may come more from the reader's mind than from any straightforward explanation.
Lethem creates a wholly alien setting with wholly alien natives. Along with that, he introduces one of the
most intriguing and enchanting indigenous animals in all of science fiction.
Coming-of-age stories are many, in genre as well as mainstream fiction, but it is on Lethem's distant
planet, with little that is human in evidence, that readers will feel the pull of a human bond unlike
any they have experienced before.
It is the unnatural settings that make all of Lethem's novels and short stories foreign territory,
at first. But, there is a point early in every piece when the reader relaxes into the rhythm and
reason of Lethem's prose. From this instant until the last page, it is impossible to put Girl In Landscape
aside. The book may not be in your hands, but it will be on your mind until you rocket through to the final word.
Don't relax yet; it is after you add Girl In Landscape to your already sagging shelves that the most
intense reflection begins. There is something deep inside Jonathan Lethem's mind, something we can't snare,
but can't wait to hunt for the moment it shows a flash of itself.
Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. She co-authored the 45th anniversary issue cover of MAD Magazine. Previews of her latest, as yet unpublished, novel are available at Hades Online. |
||||||||||
|
|
If you find any errors, typos or anything else worth mentioning,
please send it to editor@sfsite.com.
Copyright © 1996-2013 SF Site All Rights Reserved Worldwide