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Author:
Kelley Eskridge
Publication
Date: Jan.
2004
Publisher:
Eos
368
pages
Buy
it on Amazon
Summary
A young woman
must come to terms with herself after surviving complete and total
isolation for 8 years in a carceral virtual reality.
In
a Nutshell
A poignant and
cerebral novel from a promising new writer, Solitaire is
the best SF novel of 2004.
Review
What happens
when you isolate a human being from any contact with others for
a number of years? What kind of deep scars will this leave on his
or her psyche? How can she or he hope to ever live a normal life
again?
These are some
of the questions posed by the touching novel Solitaire,
but don't think it's a grim, depressing story. At its heart is an
emotional, uplifting story of inner strength and, dare I say it,
love. It's cerebral SF of a breed rarely seen nowadays, and it's
an amazing debut by Kelley Eskridge.
The main character
of Solitaire is Jackal, one of many children called "Hopes",
chosen as symbols of a new era of peace and prosperity, and destined
to rule and perform in a number of high-profile roles. Jackal is
a strong, young woman, but she is possessed of some doubts about
her legitimacy as a Hope. The first part of the novel focuses on
Jackal's life in Ko Corporation, and introduces a number of interesting
secondary characters. Most importantly, we meet Snow, Jackal's girlfriend,
and we are treated to a rare sight in SF: an homosexual relationship
that is treated matter-of-factly, without any point dragged out
of it.
The novel takes
a dramatic turn, however, when Jackal finds herself condemned for
an accident that killed hundreds of people. She is sentenced to
a prototype technology, meant to rehabilitate convicts quickly:
Virtual Confinement, or VC. In VC, 8 years will go by while Jackal
is trapped in a small room without any escape or interaction with
the outside world. In the real world, only 8 months go by.
That part of
the novel is interesting, but the heart of the narrative is about
what happens when Jackal comes out. The second half of the novel
focuses on Jackal's new life, and the deep trauma that VC has dealt
her. I really don't want to spoil it further. It's an intimate,
touching story of survival and rehabilitation, and it alternates
between scenes of great poignancy, and moments of thought-provoking
speculation.
Solitaire
is clearly a case of well-written feminine SF, something I always
find to be refreshing and interesting as a guy. Eskridge spends
more time studying the effects of her future technology and society
on individuals, than she does on explaining technical minutiae,
which should always be the point of SF, in my opinion. The core
of Solitaire is about people, and actually about love and
healing. It's flawed, complex love, too, not the kind of papering
usually seen in SF romance novels such as Lois McMaster Bujold's
Miles Vorkosigan series.
Solitaire
suffers from being too short, actually; it feels like Eskridge could
have spent more time detailing Virtual Confinement, or show us Jackal's
life after VC over a longer period. However, Solitaire
is a touching, thought-provoking first novel, and the best SF novel
I read in 2004. Kelley Eskridge is now on my list of new SF authors
on whom to keep a close eye.
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