Park Polar | ||||||||
Adam Roberts | ||||||||
PS Publishing, 109 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Those are some of the sobering questions proposed by Adam Roberts in his novella Park Polar. In his world
of the future, too many people means more land is needed to farm which means no room for those gorgeous animals
we've all grown accustomed to protecting. Forget saving habitats. Forget the cute and cuddly critters. And you
can certainly forget the not-so-lovable animals, unless they're edible. Keeping any kind of animal means moving
them to the few remaining places people don't want to go and where crops just won't grow. Welcome to Antarctica.
Roberts' nightmare vision of the future has corporations firmly in control of the planet. The military exists to
protect corporate employees from the bloodthirsty environmentalists, who, to most of the world, are the bad guys
in this story. Into this tense situation comes Dr. Annalee McCollough to introduce her genetically-engineered
kangaroos who will live out their lives on the rapidly changing South Pole. Is it just her imagination that
everyone else on the team seems to be just waiting for her to turn her back before they stick in the
knife? Something is very wrong at Park Polar, something it is worth her life to figure out.
Park Polar has the perfect setting for a chilling mystery and a fight for survival. Nowhere else on
Earth could the characters be so completely isolated or in such a hostile environment, even if much of the
environment is of their own making. Wild beasts abound in the wasteland, but none as dangerous as the ones
they call their colleagues. This distinction echoes the overall theme of the book, where humans are, as
always, their own worst enemies.
Pushed into the future and employing genetic manipulation that is years beyond us at this point, Roberts
has created an end-of-the-world scenario that needs no bombs, plagues, or triffids to bring humanity to its knees.
Simple refusal to face the realities of over-population, scarcity, destruction of habitat, and pollution
can accomplish the same Alas, Babylon ending, without all the rockets' red glare.
Sustainability. Not such a scary word as many that await you in the
pages of Park Polar. We're used to taking a peek into the future.
Sometimes it amazes us. Sometimes it depresses us. This time it should scare the hell out of all of us.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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