Guy Gavriel Kay has created his own little niche - books that are part
historical fiction, moved slightly to the left, and part fantasy. That
is to say, he researches the hell out of a particular time and place,
and then writes in a fictionalized version of that setting, frequently
with some magical elements, and almost always with two moons.
There
was only one moon this time. It threw me off slightly. Until one of the
poets wistfully said that he'd always thought it would be nice if there
were two moons in the sky.
Under Heaven is set in Kitai, a
fictionalized China of the 8th century. It is a story of imperial
machinations, revolt, and the journey of one man, Shen Tai, who has
lived apart from the world for two years, and must rejoin it at top
speed, as he is given a gift that is at once both extremely powerful and
extremely dangerous. He is thrown back into the imperial dance, and
must learn what the steps are while staying alive (and, not
incidentally, avoiding assassination attempts.)
This is a complex
book, with many different strands, and I am not going to even remotely
try to summarize them here. What I would like to say, more than anything
else, is this:
Guy Gavriel Kay is a master at setting up moments that are exquisitely tense and heartbreakingly inevitable.
He
writes his characters so well that when a moment balanced on a knife's
edge comes, I feel it like all the air is sucked out of the room, and I
am observing the scene from inside a crystal. And then someone does
something, says something, and my heart breaks and I think, yes, that is
exactly what that person would do. It's heartbreaking, it's terrifying,
but it is perfect. I didn't know it until this moment, but there is no
other way this could have gone. I would never have imagined this
happening, but now that it has, it is clear and perfect and painful. And
sometimes clear and perfect and lovely.
There are so many of his
characters I love, who are on different sides and have different
agendas,and sometimes who do terrible things - but because I know who
they are and why they do what they do, I still feel affection for them.
(With one exception, in Under Heaven. One man's pettiness leads to falls
I would have thought unimaginable, and for that I cannot forgive him.)
In
a couple of his last books, he has combined this intricate and
controlled sense of character with ways of looking at the story from
outside, using methods that I have loved. In The Last Light of The Sun,
the story will sometimes spin out, for a page, telling us what happened
to an extremely incidental character whose life was touched, for good or
for ill, by the story going on around them. In Under Heaven,
particularly near the end, chapters will often start with how history
will regard the events we just witnessed, in a few skillful paragraphs
showing how what we just saw will be remembered, and how it will be
changed in the remembering.
In the same two books, he has also
been playing with the theme that sometimes actions can be heroic and
meaningful - and yet change nothing at all. Shen Tai can try to rush
into the city on a heroic mission, and yet, in the end, it changes
nothing. Opportunities pass by, chance plays a hand, and sometimes
things do not happen. Nothing is inevitable. The vagaries of life get in
the way.
It was a joy to read this book, even when it hurt.
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