Tuesday, April 30, 2024

“Sailing to Utopia” by Michael Moorcock

 

 

534 pages, White Wolf Publishing, ISBN-13: 978-1565041837

 

Over the course of the mid-to-late 90s, White Wolf Publishing produced this massive omnibus collection of Michael Moorcock’s “Eternal Champion” stories, a recurrent aspect in many of his tales. Sailing to Utopia was the eighth in this series featuring the characters Konrad Arflane, “Ryan”, Colonel Jerry Cornelius (who seems to be a different character from Jerry Cornelius) and Max von Bek, and includes the tales The Ice Schooner, The Black Corridor, The Distant Suns and Flux. I think that the editors over at White Wolf were in a quandary over these stories, as bundling them all together is rather a stretch, seeing as they basically have nothing to do with one another – except for ships, and traveling hither and yon. So…there’s that. Anyway…

 

The first book is The Ice Schooner, a stand-alone work published in 1969 that really has nothing to do with Moorcock’s Multiverse…but oh well, here it is. It takes place on Earth sometime in the far future after a nuclear war has caused temperatures around the globe to plummet and coating the planet in a never-ending sheet of ice. Creatures have adapted to the new climate, especially the whales who now prowl the surface and have become the principle source of food and raw material for the sparse and dwindling human population. Indeed, the existence of the eight cities of the chasms where the story takes place depends on the hearty crews of these ice schooners to do their job and hunt the terrible and elusive whales. The ice schooners themselves are rather cool, too: sailing ships with fiberglass hulls that glide about on massive metal skies, they were crafted long ago and the method of their construction has been lost. I found The Ice Schooner to be rather cool (heh), with an interesting (though underdeveloped) world filled with intriguing creatures and a different-though-familiar society. The protagonist, Konrad Arflane, still has all the trappings of an Eternal Champion, what with his being strong and clever and wise and willing to Fight the Good Fight, but in a rather different twist, he is not a future-sighted revolutionary but rather a traditionalist determined to preserve his world and its way of life; indeed, the novel’s central theme is the friction caused by Arflane’s stubborn traditionalism butting against other characters who are slowly departing from the time honored ways and the physical evidence of the evolving world is. This is at heart a Sci-Fi action yarn and is unapologetic about it, despite flashes of trying to be something more or say something profound.

 

Next we have The Black Corridor, and a book more different from the previous entry would be hard to find. Likewise written in 1969 – this time coauthored with Moorcock’s wife at the time, Hilary Bailey – this tale explores the effects of physical isolation – in the first instance, a spaceship with a lone awake crewman hurtling across space (written by Moorcock) and societal isolation – and in the second instance, a near-future world plunging into fascism (written by Bailey). The two tales are parallel narratives in which an astronaut, piloting a spaceship with a group of family and friends towards their new home of Barnard’s Star, while Mr. Ryan, a successful toy businessman, is compelled by the authorities to fire his Welsh staff and begin manufacturing weapons; both stories converge at a distant point in space. I promise, while both stories appear to have nothing in common, it all becomes clear in the end. There is a deep political message running through the stories, as well, one that states that warns against mankind’s tendency to search for messiahs to solve their every problem rather than a pragmatic politicians to fix everyday problems (a hopeless desire, if you ask me).

 

The Distant Suns is the third book in this volume and takes place on a 21st Century Earth (uh-oh) that is overcrowded, underfed and teetering on the brink of worldwide chaos (I repeat, uh-oh). But fear not, for Colonel Jerry Cornelius, hero and adventurer extraordinaire, arrives as humanity’s last best hope to Save Us All and, accompanied his wife Cathy and good friend Professor Frank Marek, undertakes to brave the madness of space in order to find another world able to sustain human life. But all is not what it seems on this New Earth, and Colonel Cornelius finds himself in a race against time to uncover the hidden mysteries of the planet in time for the rest of humanity to relocate and save itself. As well being a straight-up Sci-Fi novel, The Distant Suns is a Jerry Cornelius book, which may or may not mean anything, seeing as there is precious little to connect his books with one another. What it does have in common with other Jerry Cornelius tales is its pretentiousness, which wears thin in this book even faster than usual. The characterizations in The Distant Suns, along with the pace and overall style, are sadly typical of any work starring Jerry Cornelius – well, maybe not, seeing as in this one, at least, Cornelius has been extricated from his native Carnaby Street, London.

 

Lastly we come to Flux which, along with being the shortest tale in this volume (and written in conjunction with Barrington Bayley), is also the oldest, having been published in New Worlds #132 way the hell back in deepest, darkest 1963; is has also been retconned, with the original character, Max File, being replaced by Max von Bek, thus retrospectively making it a part of the Eternal Champion mythos. So here we go: on a future Earth, the European Economic Community (EEC) is nearing a critical mass of combined overpopulation and overdevelopment and a point of catastrophic entropy (you don’t say). To avert crisis, it quietly developed a means of time travel and selects Max File…er, Max von Bek, a government functionary who was socially engineered to possess a high degree of skill in the art of organizational management, to travel ten years into the future to find out what will happen and what will come about and then return to report his findings so that laws governing the sequence of time may be analyzed and a formula for human government may be developed that removes “the random element from human affairs”. Got it? Flux is nothing if not ambitious, and it’s a shame that Moorcock did not develop it into a full-scale novel, or more, and is more frustrating than intriguing because of it. While many Deep Thoughts emerge and the Multiverse makes a cameo, the tale is far too short to be really fulfilling. As for the Shyamalanesque twist at the end…

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