(urth) note Re: Short Sun blog
Lee Berman
severiansola at hotmail.com
Mon Sep 27 06:33:52 PDT 2010
>David Stockhoff- Actually, the assumption that at least most life in the NS/LS/SS
>universe has the same biochemistry. The inhumi feed on both humans and
>Neighbors, for example. And then you have the alzabo.
Yep. And The Mother and Seawrack are down there eating drowned human sailors and, I
think, Neighbor sailors before that. That's the picture I get from the Sun series-
a galaxy of creatures able to eat each other and share their physical and mental
being and existence.
Is this because Urthly humans spread out across the galaxy and mutated into a myriad
of creatures? Or is it because a parasitic race feeding on multiple species serve
as a vector for genetic sharing and splicing, like a virus for bacteria cells or even
oncogenes in humans. Perhaps some combination of these processes?
I think the suggestions for this stuff are clear to see in the story. Identifying exactly
which process created each superhuman character is probably not so important. Only the
possibilities matter, which is all I've ever argued for.
For me, the underpinnings of BotNS are as an exploration of the interaction between
pagan gods and Judeo-Christianity. Wolfe did this by creating an Earth twin where
The Flood and Jesus never happened, allowing the pagan gods to have continued dominion
far into the future of where we on Earth are now.
I'm glad Wolfe gave us various possibilities for the origin of such creatures as Erebus,
Zeus, Typhon, Gabriel, Odin, Arioch, Abaia, Tzadkiel, etc. But at the end of the day, for
the purpose of this story, I think it is more important to understand what they are rather
than where they came from.
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