From rec.arts.sf.reviews Tue Feb 28 10:27:53 1995 Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews,rec.arts.books.reviews,alt.history.what-if Path: news.ifm.liu.se!liuida!sunic!trane.uninett.no!eunet.no!nuug!Norway.EU.net!dkuug!EU.net!howland.reston.ans.net!ix.netcom.com!netcom.com!postmodern.com!not-for-mail From: ecl@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com (Evelyn C Leeper) Subject: RELUCTANT VOYAGERS by Elisabeth Vonarburg Message-ID: <9502131220.ZM11589@mtgpfs1.mt.att.com> Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Sender: mcb@netcom21.netcom.com Organization: The Internet Date: Fri, 24 Feb 1995 02:09:03 GMT Approved: mcb@postmodern.com (rec.arts.sf.reviews moderator) Lines: 59 Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.sf.reviews:727 rec.arts.books.reviews:344 alt.history.what-if:12015 RELUCTANT VOYAGERS by Elisabeth Vonarburg (translated by Jane Brierley) Bantam, ISBN 0-553-56242-8, 1995, 480pp, US$5.99 A book review by Evelyn C. Leeper Copyright 1995 Evelyn C. Leeper Publishing an "alternate Canada" novel in the United States is quite an act of faith by Bantam: they obviously assume that readers know enough about the real one to know where this one is different. This is not only an alternate history, or perhaps more accurately, not entirely an alternate history. Catherine wakes up one morning in Montreal, but a Montreal not quite as she remembered it. Familiar streets suddenly look unfamiliar--but when Catherine returns later in the day, everything is back the way it was. She has problems remembering history--someone will mention "the Northerners," and she won't know what they are talking about. But when she looks it up at the library, it all sounds familiar, as if she had always known it, and indeed she feels as though she *has* always known it, except for that unexplained lapse. To the reader of alternate histories, it is even more confusing. At first, it seems as if the changes between Catherine's world and our own happened in the late 18th Century, but then we find there have been other changes, far earlier and more basic, and the alternate history aspect seems to be highly inconsistent. Vonarburg does eventually resolve all this, but not in a way likely to please those expecting a standard alternate history story. Even as a straightforward science fiction story, RELUCTANT VOYAGERS is not completely satisfying, having too much of a deus ex machina ending. Since Catherine has already been having strange dreams, it doesn't take brilliant insight to realize that these have something to do with the mysterious goings-on, but even so, the explanation was (to me) unsatisfactory. It's possible that the problem is in the translation. Maybe Vonarburg has written in a style that doesn't translate very well. But for whatever reason, I could never really connect this book. %A Vonarburg, Elisabeth %E Jane Brierley (translator) %T Reluctant Voyagers %T Les voyagers malgre eux %I Bantam Spectra %C New York %D March 1995 %G ISBN 0-553-56242-8 %P 480pp %O paperback, US$5.99 -- Evelyn C. Leeper | +1 908 957 2070 | Evelyn.Leeper@att.com "No one is ever fanatically devoted to something they have complete confidence in. No one is fanatically shouting that the sun is going to rise tomorrow. They *know* it is. Whenever someone is fanatically devoted to a set of beliefs or dogmas or goals, it is only because those beliefs or goals are in doubt." --Robert M. Pirsig