Doomsday Book
Connie Willis
Connie Willis pulled out all the
stops for this dynamo of a novel, utilizing such ordinarily disparate elements
as a post-quasi-apocalypse near future, a deadly contagion, and time travel.
Yet though its narrative action is divided between two fairly disparate
temporal settings, Doomsday Book
maintains a fairly urgent sense of suspense, a remarkable feat to accomplish in
any 550-page book. Though there are times when the pace slows considerably,
Willis is careful to pull back and switch settings, always seeming to change
just when the current story becomes the slightest bit tiresome or when the
reader begins to get curious about the concurrent story. Willis also does a
good job of handling narrative synchronicity, vital when juggling stories that
take place in a future present and in the Middle Ages, where an intrepid time
traveler has managed to go while on winter holiday at Oxford. Though any time travel system has its
peculiar quirks, the one in this particular book has its rules fairly clearly
outlined early enough that readers are inclined to believe it, and to accept a
strange intertwining of past and present events, which crucially move along at
a similar rate. And though the thematic link between the historical destination
and the future is more obvious than insightful, it packs a dramatic wallop.
Willis also explores the potential difficulties faced by a time traveler and-
not so subtly, mind- highlights some of the necessary impossibilities faced by
any historians, allowing her temporal voyage to highlight both the differences
and similarities between our times and those past. That she manages to do this
without becoming preachy is a testament to the author's restraint and, in
another way, to the strength of her characters. Not everyone is likeable, but
these seem to be living humans, not caricatures, and they all serve their
respective purposes superbly. Even more remarkable is the strength of the
medieval characters, and the author's ability to make them seem both of their
times and relatable to ours, again without too much pomp or undue
over-attention. Though the story can seem to drag at times, the book
simultaneously seems to read quickly, and the accelerated pace of the third
book is much appreciated after a not-so-suspenseful attempt at a Big Reveal.
Regardless, everything about the book is executed nicely, with effective prose
and obvious- and appreciated- deliberation. Doomsday
Book can be a bit of a slog in the middle, but it is a remarkably executed
hybrid novel well deserving of its many accolades.
Grade: A-
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