Buster Keaton, Margaret Leahy, and Wallace Beery in "Three Ages" |
Book notes: Past and future people.
Shaman by Kim Stanley Robinson
Evolutionary psychologists rely on the Savanna Principle,
which states that “our hominid ancestors spent 99.9 percent of their
evolutionary history as hunter gatherers” and that “the basic functioning of
the brain has not changed much in the last ten thousand years” (Alan S
Miller/Satoshi Kanazawa). Our Pleistocene brains are not always well suited to
postindustrial civilization. While there is plenty of blog material in that, on
this occasion I’ll employ the principle just to explain the persistent appeal
of a sub-genre of sci-fi: tales set in prehistoric times, sometimes dubbed
paleo-fiction or plei-fi. (I’ve dabbled in them myself a couple of times: see Neander
Valley Girl and Modern
Times at my short story site.) Our brains are very suited to
these stories, at least when they are well written.
Nebula and Hugo award winner Kim Stanley Robinson, best
known for his hard-sci-fi Mars trilogy (Red
Mars, Green Mars & Blue Mars), writes very well. Some
readers complained that his Mars books read too much like terraforming
manuals, but most appreciated the results of his meticulous research, which
didn’t completely overwhelm the human stories. In the case of Robinson’s
plei-fi novel Shaman, his attention
to detail is an unmitigated positive. We meet the central character Loon at age
12 on his “wander,” a rite of passage for an apprentice shaman, and soon are
immersed in an ice-age world of clans, hunts, gathers, festivals, rituals, cave
painting, pairings, and raids. It all feels so very much like “home.” The
hopes, desires, and fears of the characters are completely relatable, as is the
ultimate pathos of their human state that is with us still: the threat that
death will extinguish not just us personally but our legacy.
A big Thumbs Up.
****
Hominid by John C. Boland
John C. Boland has written a taut little thriller, now
available in paperback. Faced with the title Hominid, a reader might be forgiven for expecting another example
of paleo-fiction. What the reader gets instead in a present-day setting is part
murder mystery, part adventure, and part sci-fi. The science in the novel is
pretty good. In present-day Maryland, archeologist David Isaac encounters his
mentor and an old flame as he joins a dig on a remote Chesapeake Bay island on
which there has been significant inbreeding for more than four centuries. They
encounter evidence of speciation: a new hominid may be in town.
In truth, there isn’t much risk of a new species of human
turning up unless one is deliberately engineered – something beyond our current
capabilities but conceivable at some time in the future. As noted above, the
past 10,000 years has not been long enough to alter the human species
fundamentally. To be sure, superficial adaptations have cropped up here and
there in that time span, e.g. adult lactose tolerance in Northern Europe and
parts of Africa, high altitude resistance in the Himalayas, and somewhat
smaller brains everywhere. (Domesticated people, like domesticated animals, generally
are not as bright as their wild ancestors: See The
Incredible Shrinking Brain.) Though bought at the expense of large
past die-offs that favored minor adaptations, none of these traits were enough
to indicate the beginnings of a new species anywhere. With an interconnected
global population of 7 billion, splitting off a new branch of humanity is less
likely than ever.
What are the conditions that would make speciation possible?
In the deliberate improvement of farm animals, this is achieved by a mix of
inbreeding and culling. Inbreeding emphasizes desired specific traits while
culling reduces the negative consequences. Inbreeding harms a stock only
without a cull. The same methods (accidentally achieved if at all, one hopes) will
work for humans, and no place is better for a significant mutation to spread
than in an isolated colony. It’s called the Founder Effect. The chances of
creating a new species this way, while negligible, are not impossible, and
Boland spins a good yarn out of the “not impossible.”
Another Thumbs Up, though personally I’m not much worried
about speciation. We’ll have AI robots long before that happens. The robots can
worry about it.
Jimmy Castor Bunch: Troglodyte (Cave Man) charted in 1972
Ha, Troglodyte! From my younger years I used to love all those dinosaur movies like One Million Years B.C., Journey to the Center of the Earth, King Kong, Godzilla, Reptilicus, Clan of the Cave Bear, Iceman, and so forth. I really wish someone would make something like that now, but I guess there's always the Jurassic Park movies. But I'd like to see more well made movies in this genre.
ReplyDeleteThe books you reviewed sound interesting & I added them to my Goodreads.com list. I have one around here that I haven't read yet called Raptor Red that I found at a book sale. I'll have to keep your book recommendations in mind when I go to a book sale that they're having in a week or so locally here. By the way thanks for including the links to your stories too. I'll try and read them. One of these days I want to get a i tablet, that would be great for such things.
I was in the kitchen the other day and was listening to TEDtalks on NPR, which coincides with this, check it out: http://www.npr.org/programs/ted-radio-hour/?showDate=2015-10-09
Thanks for the link. I like that Louise Leakey is following in the family business.
DeleteI still love those kind of movies. Naturally I'm fond of the originals but the some of the better remakes at least make it possible to share them with friends, many of whom are intolerant of old-style effects, not to mention B&W. The 2005 King Kong was one. I managed to get my guests to watch the cliff sequence in the '33 film just long enough to demonstrate just how much the '05 owes to the original, right down to Naomi Watts' wardrobe.
I looked up Raptor Red and see it was written by Robert Bakker of all people. That should be fun.