Showing posts with label Ted Chiang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ted Chiang. Show all posts

Thursday, January 2, 2020

The 10 best books of 2019 / Exhalation by Ted Chiang review / Stories from an SF master





Th10 

best books of  2019


Exhalation by Ted Chiang review – stories from an SF master


The emotional and the cerebral are expertly balanced in these meditations on the mysteries of existence

Alan Roberts
Friday 12 July 2019


P
erhaps the world’s least hasty writer, Ted Chiang has built his fiercely dedicated fanbase slowly but surely. His first story, “Tower of Babylon”, appeared in 1990. During the 90s he published only three more pieces. Eleven further stories have appeared since 2000. He has never published a novel, yet his 15 stories have won all the genre’s most prestigious awards: Hugos and Nebulas, Sturgeons, Tiptrees and BSFAs galore – more than two dozen prizes in all.

In 2016 Chiang came to the attention of a much larger audience when his “Story of Your Life” was adapted for the big screen as Arrival, starring Amy Adams. But it hasn’t changed him. He continues on his slow-paced way, occasionally releasing another carefully thought-through, precisely worked SF short to the world.
Picador’s advance publicity for this, only his second collection, betrays a certain excitability. “In the world of the science-fiction short story Chiang’s work is legendary. Now is the time for the rest of us to discover his unique imagination.” That “rest of us” is, perhaps, ill-judged (don’t you rest-of-us me, sunshine: I’ve been reading Chiang for decades), but there’s no denying that it is an appealing prospect.




That said, there is an inevitable danger in accelerating SF hype into hyperspace. Exhalation’s nine stories are … fine. A couple are excellent, most are good, a couple don’t really work. It feels like damning the book with faint praise to say so, but isn’t that exactly how short-story collections generally work?
The weakest piece is “The Great Silence”, a five-page squib based on the idea that we’ve been looking in the wrong place in our search for alien intelligence, and should have been talking to, er, parrots. (Who’s a pretty borg, then?) “What’s Expected of Us” is even shorter: a three-page speculation about what would happen to human mental health if it were conclusively proved that there is no such thing as free will. At the other end of the scale lengthwise is “The Lifecycle of Software Objects”, an 110-page novella about “digients”, souped-up Tamagotchis in shared online virtual worlds that are sold to people as pets. A small group of owners become obsessed with seeing how far these e-creatures can evolve: interacting with them, tutoring them, hiring or buying them robotic bodies so they can move around the real world. Chiang asks some fascinating questions in this story: at what point does a programmed entity become “alive”? What would our ethical obligations be to such creatures? If digients are programmed to love their owners in a sexual way, is the result deplorable digital bestiality, or an exciting new sexual frontier? But without his usual concision this story drags. Its human characters, intensely focused on their virtual pets, live lives of emotional disconnect that, while presumably part of Chiang’s point, make for a rather unsatisfying read.



In 2016, Chiang’s ‘Story of Your Life’ was adapted for the big screen as Arrival.
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 In 2016, Chiang’s ‘Story of Your Life’ was adapted for the big screen as Arrival. Photograph: Everett/REX/Shutterstock

If this story suggests that his strengths are not those of a full-length novelist, there are enough classic Chiang shorts to make the collection something special. “The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling”, about a near-future in which fallible human memory is superseded by searchable digital video, manages to grow beyond its rather sub-Black Mirror premise into a wise and moving meditation on its titular distinction. “Dacey’s Patent Automatic Nanny” is a clever piece of steampunk, and “Omphalos” a lovely exploration of what the solar system would be like if God had indeed created it only a few thousands of years ago. In “Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom” it is possible, via a kind of quantum iPad, to interact with versions of ourselves who made different choices at crucial life moments, and are living with the consequences in a different timeline. It’s a story that does what Chiang does best: develops an ingenious, rigorously worked-through SF premise in ways that are emotionally resonant, examining how deeply vulnerable human beings are to “if only … ” thinking.

Ted Chiang



The collection’s two finest stories both achieve this expert balance of the emotional and the cerebral. “The Merchant and the Alchemist’s Gate” is an intricate and delightful Arabian Nights-style yarn about a time gate; and the title story deftly creates an alien world, bounded by solid chromium, in which live touchingly thoughtful robotic creatures. One dissects its own head in an attempt to understand how the myriad flaps of gold leaf inside its brain generate its consciousness and in doing so discovers a profound truth about the strange cosmos it inhabits. Chiang makes this entropic revelation ring like a bell, and his quaint world suddenly focuses a truth about all existence. It’s Chiang at his best, and worth the price of admission on its own.
 Adam Roberts’s The Real-Town Murders is published by Gollancz. Exhalation by Ted Chiang is published by Picador (RRP £16.99).

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

The 10 Best Books of 2019 / The New York Times




Th10 

best books of  2019

The editors of The Times Book Review  (The New York Times) choose the best fiction and nonfiction titles this year.
Published Nov. 22, 2019
Updated Nov. 25, 2019


Disappearing Earth
By Julia Phillips



In the first chapter of this assured debut novel, two young girls vanish, sending shock waves through a town perched on the edge of the remote, brooding Kamchatka Peninsula. What follows is a novel of overlapping short stories about the various women who have been affected by their disappearance. Each richly textured tale pushes the narrative forward another month and exposes the ways in which the women of Kamchatka have been shattered — personally, culturally and emotionally — by the crime.
Fiction | Alfred A. Knopf. $26.95. 

The Topeka School
By Ben Lerner
Lerner’s exhilarating third novel, after “Leaving the Atocha Station” and “10:04,” rocks an emphatically American amplitude, ranging freely from parenthood to childhood, from toxic masculinity to the niceties of cunnilingus, from Freud’s Oedipus complex to Tupac’s “All Eyez on Me.” Adam Gordon returns as the protagonist, but this time as a high school debate star, and mostly in the third person. Equal portions of the book are given over to the voices of his psychologist parents, and to a former classmate whose cognitive deficits are the inverse of Adam’s gifts. The earlier novels’ questions about art and authenticity persist; but Adam’s faithlessness is now stretched into a symptom of a national crisis of belief. Lerner’s own arsenal has always included a composer’s feel for orchestration, a ventriloquist’s vocal range and a fine ethnographic attunement. Never before, though, has the latter been so joyously indulged, or the bubblicious texture of late Clintonism been so lovingly evoked.
Fiction | Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $27.

Exhalation
By Ted Chiang

Exhalation by Ted Chiang review / Stories from an SF master


Many of the nine deeply beautiful stories in this collection explore the material consequences of time travel. Reading them feels like sitting at dinner with a friend who explains scientific theory to you without an ounce of condescension. Each thoughtful, elegantly crafted story poses a philosophical question; Chiang curates all nine into a conversation that comes full circle, after having traversed remarkable terrain.
Fiction | Alfred A. Knopf. $25.95

Lost Children Archive
By Valeria Luiselli

 Lost Children Archive by Valeria Luiselli / Review by Anthony Cummins



The Mexican author’s third novel — her first to be written in English — unfolds against a backdrop of crisis: of children crossing borders, facing death, being detained, being deported unaccompanied by their guardians. The novel centers on a couple and their two children (all unnamed), who are taking a road trip from New York City to the Mexican border; the couple’s marriage is on the brink of collapse as they pursue independent ethnographic research projects and the woman tries to help a Mexican immigrant find her daughters, who’ve gone missing in their attempt to cross the border behind her. The brilliance of Luiselli’s writing stirs rage and pity, but what might one do after reading such a novel? Acutely sensitive to these misgivings, Luiselli has delivered a madly allusive, self-reflexive, experimental book, one that is as much about storytellers and storytelling as it is about lost children.



Fiction | Alfred A. Knopf. $27.95.
Night Boat to Tangier
By Kevin Barry




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A desolate ferry terminal on the Spanish coast isn’t a place where you’d expect to encounter sharp-edged lyricism or rueful philosophy, but thanks to the two Irish gangster antiheroes of Barry’s novel, there’s plenty of both on display, along with scabrously amusing tale-telling and much summoning of painful memories. Their lives have become so intertwined that the young woman whose arrival they await can qualify as family for either man. Will she show? How much do they care? Their banter is a shield against the dark, a witty new take on “Waiting for Godot.”




Fiction | Doubleday. $25.95.


Say Nothing
By Patrick Radden Keefe





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Say Nothing by Patrick Radden Keefe




Masked intruders dragged Jean McConville, a 38-year-old widow and mother of 10, from her Belfast home in 1972. In this meticulously reported book — as finely paced as a novel — Keefe uses McConville’s murder as a prism to tell the history of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Interviewing people on both sides of the conflict, he transforms the tragic damage and waste of the era into a searing, utterly gripping saga.



Nonfiction | Doubleday. $28.95.

The Club

By Leo Damrosch







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The Club by Leo Damrosch


The English painter Joshua Reynolds just wanted to cheer up his friend Samuel Johnson, who was feeling blue. Who knew that the Friday night gab sessions he proposed they convene at London’s Turk’s Head Tavern would end up attracting virtually all the leading lights of late-18th-century Britain? Damrosch brings the Club’s redoubtable personalities — the brilliant minds, the jousting wits, the tender camaraderie — to vivid life, delivering indelible portraits of Johnson and Reynolds, Edmund Burke, Adam Smith, the actor David Garrick, the historian Edward Gibbon and, of course, Johnson’s loyal biographer James Boswell: “a constellation of talent that has rarely if ever been equaled.”



Nonfiction | Yale University Press. $30.


The Yellow House
By Sarah M. Broom






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The Yellow House by Sarah M. Broom




In her extraordinary, engrossing debut, Broom pushes past the baseline expectations of memoir to create an entertaining and inventive amalgamation of literary forms. Part oral history, part urban history, part celebration of a bygone way of life, “The Yellow House” is a full indictment of the greed, discrimination, indifference and poor city planning that led her family’s home to be wiped off the map. Tracing the history of a single home in New Orleans East (an area “50 times the size of the French Quarter,” yet nowhere to be found on most tourist maps, comprising scraps of real estate whites have passed over), from the ’60s to Hurricane Katrina, this is an instantly essential text, examining the past, present and possible future of the city of New Orleans, and of America writ large.



Nonfiction | Grove Press. $26.


No Visible Bruises
By Rachel Louise Snyder








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No Visible Bruises by Rachel Louise Snyder review / Domestic violence in America


Snyder’s thoroughly reported book covers what the World Health Organization has called “a global health problem of epidemic proportions.” In America alone, more than half of all murdered women are killed by a current or former partner; domestic violence cuts across lines of class, religion and race. Snyder debunks pervasive myths (restraining orders are the answer, abusers never change) and writes movingly about the lives (and deaths) of people on both sides of the equation. She doesn’t give easy answers but presents a wealth of information that is its own form of hope.

Nonfiction | Bloomsbury Publishing. $28.



Midnight in Chernobyl
By Adam Higginbotham





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Midnight in Chernobyl by Adam Higginbotham / Manual for Survival


Higginbotham’s superb account of the April 1986 explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant is one of those rare books about science and technology that read like a tension-filled thriller. Replete with vivid detail and sharply etched personalities, this narrative of astounding incompetence moves from mistake to mistake, miscalculation to miscalculation, as it builds to the inevitable, history-changing disaster.



Nonfiction | Simon & Schuster. $29.95.