From rec.arts.sf-reviews Fri Oct 18 10:40:17 1991 Path: herkules.sssab.se!isy!liuida!sunic!seunet!mcsun!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!pacbell.com!pacbell!pbhyc!djdaneh From: ecl@mtgzy.att.com (Evelyn C Leeper +1 908 957 2070) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf-reviews Subject: THE SCHIZOGENIC MAN by Raymond Harris Message-ID: <6875@pbhyc.PacBell.COM> Date: 17 Oct 91 18:43:17 GMT Sender: djdaneh@PacBell.COM Lines: 53 Approved: djdaneh@pbhyc.pacbell.com THE SCHIZOGENIC MAN by Raymond Harris A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1991 Evelyn C. Leeper I have no idea why this book was written. Some books are adventure stories. Some have a message. Some examine philosophical issues. So far as I can tell, this doesn't meet any of these criteria. It's just that while reading it I kept thinking that it was all to no purpose. John Heron, the main character (one hesitates to say "hero") lives in a future city (New York?) in which a lottery regularly reassigns people's roles. As in the song "That's Life," one can end up a puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a poet, a pawn, and a king, as well as just about anything else. (Shades of Jorge Luis Borges's "The Babylonian Lottery" here?) But for some reason Heron is asked to take part in an experiment in which he will dream about ancient Egypt. (The usual scientific hand-waving occurs here.) So Heron dreams, and in his dream changes history by saving Cleopatra's son Kaisarion. (Harris is somewhat idiosyncratic in choosing between Anglicized spellings and "original" spellings of proper names.) When Heron awakes, however, he discovers the world around him has changed. "Ah," you say, "a classic alternate history plot." Except the changes have little to do with Kaisarion's survival. No Egyptian temples dominate the New City skyline. No Pharaoh rules the land. Some of Heron's friends have different jobs, and he has a different first wife, but that's about the extent of it. History just doesn't work that way. At any rate, Heron tries (for insufficiently explained reasons) to find his way back to his original starting world by tracing his way down time threads when waking from the "dreams." Classic alternate history rules say this is impossible--one must return UPSTREAM of the change in order to return to the unchanged world. But Heron is mostly concerned with finding only one other person unchanged, so maybe it is possible. But who cares? The external world is affected by Heron's actions but not enough for us to care. And that Heron might or might not find the person he was seeking was a matter of disinterest to me. I kept reading expecting something to develop that would involve me either intellectually or emotionally, but it never did. I suppose the descriptions of life in Cleopatra's Egypt might interest some, but they are not enough to make me recommend the book. %T THE SCHIZOGENIC MAN %A Raymond Harris %C New York %D November 1990 %I Ace %O paperback, US$3.95 [year] %G ISBN 0-441-75398-1 %P 229pp Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | att!mtgzy!ecl or ecl@mtgzy.att.com