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DARK MATTER: A CENTURY OF
SPECULATIVE FICTION FROM
THE AFRICAN DIASPORA
Sheree R. Thomas, Editor
Warner Books
(Science Fiction, Short Stories)
Editor Sheree Thomas
took the title DARK MATTER from a scientific term for something
that radiates no light or energy and therefore cannot be seen. Thomas
plans for black writers of science fiction to be seen, and this
book is published as a radiation of light and energy. She has brought
together short stories from 1887 to the present. They cover a wide
and many times inventive range of topics, but rather than make a
disconnected comment on each of these thirty stories and five essays,
I have introduced a few categories and will not mention every story.
Beginnings
DARK MATTER begins appropriately
with two Adam and Eve stories. "Sister Lilith" by Honoree Hanonne
Jeffers was released in the year 2000 and discusses Adam, Eve and
Lilith at the beginning of time. "The Comet" by W.E.B. du Bois was
written in 1920 and speculates on an Adam and Eve of the future.
This bracketing is a good indication of the wide range of possibilities
that Thomas offers.
Love
"Chicago 1927" is the
only vampire story in this collection. Gilda is a warmhearted female
vampire who is happy to be doing good - in her own vampire way.
In this story she joins a group of friends centered around a music
club. I liked the kindness and family feeling of this story so much
I went out and special ordered author Jewelle Gomez's book THE GILDA
STORIES.
An X-rated exploration
of love, Nalo Hopkinson's "Ganger (Ball Lightning)," vividly mixes
technology with a couple who need to know each other. Hopkinson
shows her talent for sharing with us her deep understanding of seemingly
small everyday feelings.
In Steven Barnes' "The
Woman in the Wall," an ambassador's family finds itself scooped
up into a concentration camp. The description of concentration camp
life carries an appalling sense of authenticity, but the focus is
on family.
"Twice, At Once, Separated"
is one of only two stories in DARK MATTER to take its characters
into space. Linda Addison creates for us here a beautiful setting,
multi-dimensional and balanced, then leaves it empty. She appeared
to bite off more than she could chew when she brought these people
together from such a distance and had them attempt to communicate.
Recovery
Tananarive Due wrote one
of my favorite stories in this collection. "Like Daughter" is a
moving story of trying to revive a ruined life, using some options
we don't have yet. Due has a special talent - she has created these
worlds and these people in full, and some of her phrasing is inspired.
Experimental
Some writers in this book
are doing what the nineteenth century Romantic school did for painting.
Their prose is imprecise and depends on poetic imagery to convey
an overall concept. The theme of "Buddy Bolden" by Kalamu ya Salaam
is the rejection of everything of earth life except music and sensuality.
The impact of Ishmael Reed in "Future Christmas" comes from Reed's
ability to hand his pen over to his imagination and put no limitations
on his sense of the absurd.
Dialect
A half dozen of these
stories are written in dialect or partial dialect, and were hard
work for me to read. In one I found treasure. Nalo Hopkinson's "Greedy
Choke Puppy" is a story of the love between a grandmother and granddaughter.
Looked at another way, it is the story of a parasite and a premonition,
a tragedy with a sting in its tail. Hopkinson is another find for
this reader: Both the stories she contributed to this book struck
me as outstanding.
The Stars
This category refers not
the stars in the skies but the stars in the award lists. I was pleased
to see that Samuel R. Delany had contributed to DARK MATTER, because
his Nebula Award-winning BABEL-17, one of my long-time favorites,
is a brilliant book both visually and conceptually. His short story
loaned to this collection, "Aye, And Gomorrah..." seems to me a
minor effort, a speculation on sexual perversion in a possible future,
not particularly well thought through. I was surprised to learn
that it had won a Nebula Award for short story. In contrast, his
essay "Racism and Science Fiction" is thoughtful and thought provoking;
I was trying to discuss it with him in my mind as I read.
The other star of this
book is another multiple award-winner, Octavia Butler. Far and away
my favorite story in DARK MATTER is Butler's "The Evening and the
Morning and the Night," in which a young woman learns to cope with
and even make valuable a life dominated by a hereditary disease.
Butler brought to full believable realization all of her characters
and the fictional disease itself. This story dated 1987 has the
same title as an out of print book by Butler; my research has been
unable to confirm that it is a book of short stories, but it seems
likely. Amazingly, this is not the story that won her Hugo award
for short story.
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