(urth) Like a good Neighbor
António Pedro Marques
entonio at gmail.com
Tue Nov 22 07:34:22 PST 2011
Lee Berman wrote (22-11-2011 15:13):
> If intelligent, sound-minded people see that Horn was hurt and then
> recovered in the pit then that's what happened. If other intelligent,
> sound-minded people see that he died and was resurrected, that too
> happened.
But there's an intelligent, sound-minded bloke here saying that he died and
never came back... and we were left to witness the attempt of a completely
different entity to fulfill his quest. In a way that's an interesting idea;
but it does take away from the theme of Horn-trying-to-be-Silk and
Silk-trying-to-be-Horn if after all he is neither one nor the other. Nor
does one get the feeling of 'character growing out of his inborn
limitations' (*as applied to a Neighbour*) which is present of so much of
Gene Wolfe's work.
Though I'll be the first to agree that there's more in the Rajan than Silks
and Horn, and the obvious candidate is Neighbourly (and to vastly prefer the
appellation 'Rajan' over the 'SilkHorn' one).
A big problem in SS is that while the setting is much closer to us than in
LS - real planets, real people, real societies, real technology, instead of
the artificiality of most things aboard the Whorl - there are definitely
truly alien elements which we can make little sense of - Babbie, the Mother,
Seawrack, giant rays, the island of the pit, Neighbours, the Inhumi. In LS
all is comfortably man-made, albeit 'made'.
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