5/30/2023 0 Comments Jeff vandermeer trilogy![]() ![]() And, where the historical myth of the Western is now being eaten away by national guilt over the treatment of Native Americans, the zombie story provides us with the undead, a new category of nonhuman humans who can be mowed down without a twinge of conscience. What is a zombie saga like “The Walking Dead,” if not a Western? Its premise replaces the civilization that makes our lives soft and easy with that most tenacious of American dreams: the frontier, where settlers get to reinvent society from the ground up and prove their worth in feats of manly valor. ![]() This is postapocalyptic fiction, a genre that, for all its lamentation over the loss of the world we live in now, often runs on a current of nostalgia for an earlier age. It’s essential that their home, a place they call the Balcony Cliffs, be unidentifiable from above, because their unnamed city is intermittently terrorized by a ravenous giant bear named Mord, and Mord can fly. Her lover and partner, Wick, remains holed up in their booby-trapped, warrenlike refuge, a former apartment building disguised as a midden. ![]() ![]() Rachel, the twenty-eight-year-old narrator of Jeff VanderMeer’s new novel, “Borne,” lives in a harrowed, poisoned, semi-ruined city, where she scavenges scraps of food and tradeable detritus from the wreckage, a dangerous enterprise in a landscape haunted by the similarly desperate. “Borne” brings an acute intimacy to the tropes of genre fiction. ![]()
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