(urth) single parent families
Tristan Davenport
tristan_davenport at hotmail.com
Wed Jun 7 11:49:06 PDT 2006
b sharp wrote:
>As a BotNS fanatic I have noticed a complete absence (I think, any
>exceptions?) of "normal" two parent families in the series. All the child
>characters have either one or zero parents to interact with. The closest
>we
>see to an intact nuclear family is Casdoe's, but of course her chapter is
>titled "the Widow". From my lesser familiarity with his other works, I
>think this trend might extend to the greater Wolfe universe but I'm not
>sure. Anyone else have thoughts on this?
>
>
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I haven't read everything of Wolfe's by any stretch of the imagination,
either, but you seem to be onto a pattern. Parent-child estrangement
happens for just about every reason possible in the Book of the Long Sun.
The only nuclear family we really see -- the gods don't count because Typhon
is dead/in storage for most of the book -- is Horn and Nettle. But they
don't have children until the very last chapter.
In There are Doors a nuclear familie is impossible: men die shortly after
having sex.
In the few Wolfe short stories I've read that involve children, absent
fathers (and often mothers) seem to be the rule. The Island of Doctor Death
(single mom with a revolving door policy on boyfriends), The Death of Doctor
Island (children are institutionalized), The Eyeflash Miracles (boy travels
alone, but meets a stand-in father figure).
It seems that the father stand-in is an equally common pattern: Patera Pike
for Silk, Severian for Little Severian, Latro for Io (though he later has a
romance with her, if I remember right??), perhaps Dr. Death for the boy in
that story...
I don't have any analysis of this, but the trend is definitely present in
what I've read of Wolfe.
~Tristan
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