Thursday, April 30, 2009

Gulliver's Travels | Jonathan Swift

“Gulliver’s Travels” was first published in 1726, and is still valid 283 years later. The satirical novel chronicles the life of Lemuel Gulliver, a surgeon with a love of adventure and the sea. In his travels, Gulliver visits four unknown societies and learns their languages and their culture, at the same time detailing the culture of his native England. Inhabitants of these societies have values quite different from standard humans, and they don’t understand why we do some of the things we do. What we receive from Swift is a commentary on our way of life, questioning the fabric of our society.

Gulliver’s first adventure lands him in Lilliput, a land of people of a far less stature than Gulliver himself. Most of the Lilliputans are around six inches tall and are in a constant warring with another adjacent kingdom over the methodology in which they eat their eggs. It’s a great slight on religion, and some of the trivial things that religions fight over. How many people over the 283 years since Swift has written this novel, have died over a trivial point in a religious sect?

After a brief time at home with his family, Gulliver finds himself compelled again to the sea where he washes ashore amongst men which look like giants to him. The experience is the exact opposite in the native land of Brobdingnag than it was is Lilliput! He is caught by a giant and is given to his daughter as a pet. After Gulliver begins to learn the native language and shows off his swordsmanship skills to the family, the giant decides to take Gulliver on a circuit, showing him off like a circus freak to towns all over the nation. The constant exploitation tires Gulliver and renders him useless – he is the worn down shell of a man. Gulliver is sold into royalty, where he has many conversations with the king about English society and how it is run. It’s at this point that the commentary on some of the more absurd aspects of life are discussed, mainly regarding politics and the legal system. There was also quite a commentary on beauty and how when looking upon someone of gigantic size, blemishes and flaws are easier to note. Everyone has ‘flaws’ in their appearance, but that says nothing of their character.

After another brief stint in England, Gulliver travels to Laputa, a land founded on mathematics and astronomy. Gulliver is taken to a floating island, where movement is controlled by the master astronomers. In addition, he meets some magicians who have the ability to call upon the dead in order to serve them and promptly calls some prominent figures in history (ex: Alexander the Great) to discuss their life. It is here that Swift teaches us that history as we know it is not always a function of truth; lies are passed down through the ages and an accurate account of the lives of our heroes do not exist. In fact, the people that we look up to may not be heroes at all, for stories of heroes are rarely accurately recorded.

Shortly after this experience, Gulliver is taken to the mainland where he discovers nearly complete ruin. This society is obsessed with perfection, and is undergoing a tremendous amount of useless experiments in order to come up with perfect systems. As a result, they live in poverty and filth and are not progressing as a society.

The last trip on the docket is to see the Houyhnhnms, a type of horse with extensive communication skills and a natural instinct towards sustainable living. They lived in conjunction with the Yahoos, which had nearly all the same features as humans and were regarded as nuisances who could not help but use up resources at a quick pace and exhibited no control or higher rational thought. After years of living with the Houyhnhnms and discussing their philosophies, Gulliver falls in love with their values and way of life and makes a resolution to stay. Circumstances do not allow this, and he is sent back to England where he is disgusted by society including his own family. Gulliver spends numerous hours with his horses which he believes he has some mutual understanding with.

Swift makes a continual note that this book is an effort, not to entertain us, but to tell us the truth. He is imploring us to challenge our histories, our way of thinking to discover the truth that exists in society. He’s trying to get us to break down the walls, destroy the machine and ultimately change the thinking of the world. This book was written to create a movement, starting with each person that reads it.

Now that I’ve discussed the heart of the novel, I wanted to talk a little bit on how it was structured. It took me a while to determine why the novel had so little commentary on society in Lilliput to eventually a complete explosion of commentary in the land of the Houyhnhnms. My theory is, that as one ages in life, the things he/she finds important change. Children are most concerned with toys, teens are most concerned with fitting in and as one converts to a young adult, he/she becomes more concerned with the state of society and the world. This book symbolizes a progression of mindset to me. Gulliver was once more concerned about operational issues relating to size differences and eventually he becomes more concerned with the functioning of his own society. His values have shifted and this novel displays that growth.

“Gulliver’s Travels” is tremendously satirical. There are a few aspects that don’t necessarily fit well within today’s multicultural and equal rights society. There was a comment made about a native language being much easier to understand than Chinese as well as numerous comments made about the female sex. Chalk it up to a sign of the times, but note that these discretions exist and add very little to the commentary.

The style in the novel I found very difficult at first. Nearly all the sentences are run-on and the point sometimes becomes muddled in the mind at the end of such a diatribe. I had to re-read quite a few sentences because I forgot where the point started from and it was necessary to see where Swift was going. All in all, for a book written nearly 300 years ago, the reading was not as difficult as I anticipated.

In summary, I enjoyed this book much more after a great book club discussion. This novel requires some time to stew and digest, but afterwards you are left with profound impact. The one thing about fiction, is that it is usually published as intended and held in stone (ignoring translations, posthumous works etc) and Swift’s work will be forever immortalized as a form of truth.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Ender in Exile | Orson Scott Card

Excluding "War of Gifts" and "First Meetings", this is really the ninth book in the Ender's Game series. This wraps up the entire series by solving some of the questions that we were plagued with at the end of both series', which include: "Where did Ender find the Hive Queen?" and "What happened to Bean's final embryo?" This book was written to detail what happened to Ender Wiggin, after he destroyed the "buggers" and saving the human race. This story details his adventures in exile.

The tale starts out on the colony ship, which is delivering Ender to "Shakespeare Colony" AKA "Colony I" where he is to become governor. However, the captain Quincy Morgan has other ideas. The captain has become hungry with power, and expects to lead the colony when the ship lands. He also has complete authority and power over Ender's future while on the ship, able to put Wiggin into stasis for the duration of the trip, a state of inactivity caused by opposing equal forces. While in space, time elapses more quickly than on earth, and Ender cannot waste any time in stasis when he needs to focus on getting to know his future colonists and dealing with world politics. After the ship lands and the citizens make it to Shakespeare colony, the rest of the book details the finding of the Hive Queen in addition to traveling to Ganges where the mystery of Bean's embryo is discovered.

I found this novel very dualistic, contrary to nearly all other Card novels. It seemed as though Card was distracted with all the details in the first half of the novel. It was evident that he was trying to make all the pieces fit without contradicting himself, and I think he neglected to focus enough on the story and instead plugged it with such things as a play within the novel on "The Taming of the Shrew," with his own characters playing lead roles. After the arrival at Shakespeare colony, it seemed like Card relaxed a little bit on the details and let the story flow a little more. At this point, the story told itself and couldn't help but get wrapped back up into the Ender universe.

The story is really about how a war veteran deals with the psychological aspects of post-war life. Ender was consumed with guilt for destroying the Bugger race, and he spent most of his time on the ship going through material on their lives. He was obsessed with the question "Why did they let me kill them?" The continued development of Ender Wiggin, not only in actions, but in thought processes is reason enough to read this novel. This novel became a pleasure because of it, and redeemed some of the poorer aspects of the story as a result.

Card repeatedly uses some offbeat humour that comes across as childish, in the novel. I understand his playfulness, but at times, it was uncalled for and not inkeeping with the story. At one point, Ender signed his name "Ended" in a note which was written "in case he died." It was a horrible attempt at humour, and was one of a handful of poorly placed quips. In addition, by the end of the novel I was really getting sick of Card's use of naming places, people and things. In addition to "Shakespeare Colony" and the character "Achilles", which were coined first in another book, he named an Italian family Toscanos - obviously a play on the Italian city of Tuscany. In addition, the town that this family came from was called "Monopoli." Is it just me, or does that come across as a playful but stupid?

In summary, this was ranked just better than "Shadow of the Hegemon" and "Xenocide" but worse than the other novels. While half of the story was boring and tedious, the story picked up after landing at Shakespeare Colony and the growing of Ender's intelligence. Some interesting insights into people and war rounded out the novel nicely and made it a good, if not impressive, read. Three stars.


QUOTATIONS:

"I didn't have the skill to hurt them enough to prevent future attacks, and yet not kill them." 33

"People don't change, Val. Not their fundamental character. Whatever you're going to be as an adult is already visible to someone who really knows you from your birth onward." 60

"A smart boy isn't looking for a girl who is even smarter, he's looking for a girl who will love him." 91

"We aren't here to preserve the local ecology like a museum. We're here to colonize, to suit the world for ourselves." 199

In regards to monetary coins:
"You always give the greatest man the smallest denomination." 307