Much like Night Shade flag bearer The Wind-Up Girl (Bacigalupi), Seed is a near term science fiction novel that centers around the impacts of climate change and over population on the world's environment. The Hugo Award winning Wind-Up Girl focused on Thailand, but hinted at the problems ongoing in America. In many ways Seed could be that story of America. That's not to say it's derivative of Bacigalupi, but there's certainly similarities in tone and texture to the world playing to the current fears that Earth is reaching 'critical mass'.
Seed is set at dawn of the 22nd century, the world has fallen apart and a new corporate power has emerged: Satori. More than just a corporation, Satori is an intelligent, living city in America's heartland. She manufactures climate-resistant seed to feed humanity, and bio-engineers her own perfected castes of post-humans. What remains of the United States government now exists solely to distribute Satori product.
When a Satori Designer goes rogue, Agent Sienna Doss is tasked with bringing her in to break Satori's stranglehold on seed production. In a race against genetically honed assassins, Doss's best chance at success lies in an unlikely alliance with a gang of thugs and Brood - orphan, scavenger and small-time thief scraping by on the fringes of the wasteland - whose young brother may be the key to everything.
What struck me most about Seed is the poignancy. Right away Ziegler jumps into Brood's nomadic life as he migrates from Mexico to the Mid-West with the imminent arrival of summer temperatures. With his special-needs brother, Brood lives just on the edge of survival. His imperative to protect crackles with emotion and his willingness to do anything to survive is heartbreaking. These threads continue into other parts of the story from the Satori lamenting the loss of their defective sibling to Agent Doss remembering her crippling childhood. Beyond the characters the world itself is bleak and desolate. Ziegler capably takes the small kindness of a drink of water and makes it a seminal moment of compassion.
Despite this being an 'American' novel Ziegler does a great job of integrating Hispanic culture into the pastoral fiber of the country. A pretty good amount of the dialogue is in Spanish often laced with Mexican slang. Elements of Hispanic culture are prevalent in the migrants and in many ways makes Seed not only a glimpse into the future of climate change and overpopulation, but a glimpse at the integration of culture on America's horizon. Juxtaposing this is the Satori which is so disturbingly self-interested and antiseptic as to be reminiscent of William Gibson's cyberpunk corporations.
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Ziegler drops a pose in front a
pick-up truck!
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As a narrative, Seed is a multi-view point third person novel that I believe stands alone and should continue to do so. Interestingly, I realized none of what I liked about it had much do with the actual prose. I didn't find myself highlighting passages or even taking note of particularly nice turns of phrase. This isn't a negative. Rather than flowery descriptions or particularly evocative metaphors, Seed compelled me forward with... wait for it... a great story. And a great story told well.
Seed is Rob Ziegler's debut novel and another very good one from Night Shade's 2011 crop of new authors. Reading this review it might seem that this is a slow and morose novel. It's not at all. Woven in between scenes of migration and self-reflection is tons of action that culminates in a conclusion that's both explosive and cathartic. This is one you don't want to miss.
Seed is due out in the U.S. on November 1 (here). Follow the author on Twitter @Rob_Ziegler
I am posting my review of this book this week, and I have to say, I didn't enjoy it. I was really looking forward to it, but for me, it was a struggle to just get through it. I can freely admit that the book was probably over my head, and I can see why it has garnered praise. (I plan on linking your review to mine, because I like to post a link to a positive review when I write a negative one.)
ReplyDeleteYet, one thing sort of bothered me. It's not really a direct criticism of Ziegler, or seed, but of a trend in fiction, especially science fiction. I didn't touch on it in my review, because the issue didn't really contribute to my not liking the book, was just something that I thought about during the reading.
I wonder if in fiction, autism is becoming the new "magical negro" for lack of a better term. I guess what started me thinking about this is more the show Touch, then Seed, but it's something that has sort of bothered me. We "neuro-typicals" don't understand autism, or how the autistic think, so we try to create situations were the autistic are almost like superheroes with special talents that we can't really understand.
I have worked with special needs individuals for years, although not in any sort of therapeutic way. I also have a nephew who is on the spectrum. I am often amazed by things he can do, and information he picks up, and the intuitive leaps he can make. Yet, I also see the struggles he undergoes to engage with people in a traditional way. I would love to think that there is something more than a developmental disability but I can't be sure. I often wonder what he would think of a show like Touch, or reading fiction where a persons autism plays into the tale, like in Seed.
Sorry for the rambling comment, it was just a thought I had while reading Seed, and reading your review made me think about it again.