"'You're a goddess.' It took some effort for him to force the words to his lips; he made the effort and they came. 'You live forever.'...
'There are many forevers'"
The story opens with a woman's goodbye. Her note, her farewell, tells the protagonist to avoid doors--it could be any topological hole really, anything closed on four sides, but some of these portals will be significant. Do not seek her through these portals, she says. He does anyway.
Given the title, and the opening warning, the theme of doors seems, at first, to be underplayed. It's one that holds some magic for me, that inadvertant passageways could take you somewhere quite unintended.* The woman is from a mirror earth, but Wolfe only presents a couple of the significant doorways to this Elsewhere world (much like our own, but with some nontrivial differences). But that's just the overt meaning--and with Wolfe you can usually delve a little--more deeply, doorways are how the plot works. On the other side, the protagonist travels through a lot of mundane versions of them, but each passage alters the setting dramatically. It's disorienting at first, as it's intended to be, as he ducks suddenly between psychiatric institutions, shops of Eastern medicine, theaters, cars, hotels, into and out of sleep. Between each portal is a little one-act play, and you can almost hear the behind-the-scenes clattering as some higher being seems to be swapping out the scenery for the next improvisational vignette. Elsewhere feels very much like a sophisticated, but ad hoc, set, transitions justified on the fly. Is his displacement a symptom of mental illness? Is his goddess real? I often like some ambiguity in these sorts of exploration, and I suppose there's still room to question the author's reality(ies), but Wolfe comes down as clearly as could be hoped for a story like this. If the explanations didn't gel at the end, this book wouldn't have been quite the same, not quite as good. It's so much easier to open mysteries after all. But for all that Wolfe can be episodic, he almost always knows where he is going. This one is well recommended.
Keifus
*Damn you Gene Wolfe, you articulate bastard you. I wrote this story, even, almost, to the how and the why of it. Sure, the one I put together was pretty amateur, and you know, you wrote this one almost twenty years before that. But damn, it was my favorite.
Obligorati
Author: Gene Wolfe
Title: There Are Doors
Genre: fiction, science fiction, contemporary fantasy, fantasy
4 comments:
A nice review. For some reason it reminded me of a book entitled, Foxprints, by Patrick McGinley, which I'd highly recommend. There's little or no affinity between the two, really, but the thought struck me. I'd also recommend his Bogmail, where the murder weapon (without spoiling anything) is Volume 11 of the Encyclopedia Britannica. Very funny stuff!
Thanks very much for the recommendations. On the list, as it were.
K
a+! must have been a good read! sigh ... one more to add to the ever-burgeoning list.
rwywl: real wallabies
I was feeling generous, I think. Plus, early on, it hit me right in the mind (any book that makes me curse the author in the first three pages for having read my brain gets a pretty good hedge).
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