A little over a year ago, I decided that I should really try Clifford D. Simak again, after not being able to get through his books back in middle school or high school. And, while I don’t agree with all his conclusions, I now found him to be a really solid read.
I had meant to keep reading his work and realized that it had been a year so I picked up Ring Around the Sun.
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Set what was then the near future (and is now before a lot of folks reading this were born lol), the world is teetering on the edge of the Cold War becoming a hot war. Into this, a mysterious group is introducing major social changes with inexpensive food and household items that never wear out, up to and including actual houses.
The mysterious group turns out to be mutants, the next step in evolution. And their long term plan is to break the human race out of a self-destructive death spiral and create healthier cultures. This includes having folks emigrate to alternate time lines where the human race doesn’t exist so there’s a fresh Earth for them.
However, the 1% will do anything, up to and including nuclear war to keep the mutants from upsetting their world of money and power and privilege. In my limited reading, Simak leans on the idealism so it’s not a surprise that things work out okay.
While there are elements that are quite dated (a world changing innovation are razor blades that never wear out), the idea of the 1% willing to destroy the world to prevent a post scarcity society still seems pretty believe.
One thing that I did find interesting was Simak’s approach to pastoralism in Ring Around the Sun. He clearly disliked urban life and idealized rural living. And yet, he clearly and intentionally undercuts that in this book. Vickers, the protagonist, wants the rural Midwest to be innocent and harmless but it is clearly shown to not be. The other world has the transplanted folk living a rugged frontier life but it is clearly supported by industrial centers run by robots far enough away to be out of sight.
I felt like Simak was telling me that the fantasy of the pastoral life was important but only as a fantasy.
Every time I’ve gone to Simak, I’ve have found really strong writing and him presenting his case as an argument, not as a done deal. And good grief, his work is chock full of ideas. I read somewhere that John Campbell wanted authors to have their stories center around one idea but Simak not only has everything and the kitchen sink, he’s trying to find room for a second sink.
Somehow, Simak managed to write science fiction that is escapist and asks tough questions at the same time.