© 1990 by Arthur C. Clarke
MAJOR SPOILERS!
I have mixed feelings
towards Arthur C. Clarke. As a third-grader, I fondly remember buying 2001: A Space Odyssey from the
Bookmobile for a few dollars and being absolutely in love with it. I vividly recall
the first time I watched the Kubrick version, late at night by myself one
summer night early sometime in high school. But since then, it’s been a mixed
bag. Liked some short stories, dislike others. Didn’t like Childhood’s End, but kinda liked Fountains of Paradise. And still have a love-hate relationship with
his Rama books.
So why the ambivalence?
Bottom line, for me at
least, is his characters. They all have nondescript names, nondescript
personalities, and nonexistent story arcs. I could not name a single character
from the Rama books. I know of 2001’s Astronauts Poole and Bowman, but
that’s from the movie. And of Childhood’s
End, the only characters I remember are the demonesque aliens, and though I
don’t recall their names, I know that they were at least interesting to a logophile
like myself.
I will grant that he sprinkles
his books with excellent ideas. That’s the main reason I’ll read them. In the
case of The Ghost of the Grand Banks,
the technology proposed deals with raising the Titanic from the ocean floor in the far-flung future of 2012. Now,
the Titanic sits at the bottom of the
North Atlantic in two halves (in an area called, obviously enough, the Grand
Banks), as we all saw in the Cameron movie. One group of scientist
entrepreneurs in the novel wants to raise their half by injecting billions and
billions of water-resistant microspheres into the ship and lifting it with the additional
aid of thirty 10,000-ton strength cables. Hmm. Interesting
Even more interesting is
the idea of a second group of characters to raise their half: using the latest
in electromagnetic superconducting cooling technology, they’ll bring the
near-freezing water around the Titanic
to just below freezing, cold enough to where a massive block of ice will form
around the hull at the bottom of the sea. Ice cubes in a glass of water rise to
the surface. So, as is stated in the novel, an iceberg sunk the Titanic,
and another will lift her. Definitely intriguing.
But Clarke doesn’t really
explore the technology. You don’t see it developed, or being installed around
the sunken vessel. You don’t sweat out bugs and problems. There’s no tension,
no uncertainty, no insight. It’s like I read an article about it in Scientific American (that is, before the
magazine tanked into utter and insipid wokeness).
So what do we get?
Well, and here’s the big
spoiler: The Titanic doesn’t get
raised. The deus ex machina of all
seafaring science fiction movies and books, the superstorm, comes into play.
Only it’s not a hurricane but an underwater earthquake that causes a landslide buries
the Titanic forever, hours before she is to leave her ocean floor grave.
Blech.
It is, however, redeemed in
the epilogue: a couple million years in the future, long after man has left the
solar system, as the rings of Saturn dim and Mercury is an over-mined shell of
itself, an alien probe floats in and orbits Earth. Soon into its study of this
third planet, it scans a mass of strange metal, a metallic alloy not normally
found in nature, buried deep inside a mountain, and it decides further investigation
is needed. Care to venture what that metal in the mountain is?
The epilogue increased my
grade of The Ghost of the Grand Banks
from a C to a B-minus.
Other Good:
- References to Project
Jennifer in the opening pages.
- References to Raise the Titanic! by Clive Cussler, one
of the earliest non-children’s book I read as a kid.
- A very brief primer on
the mathematical oddity known as the Mandelbrot Set.
Other Bad:
- Tired cliché of the
brilliant female mathematician.
- Really tired cliché of
the brilliant mathematician daughter of the brilliant female mathematician.
- The actual Titanic was
only the subject of 20 or 30 pages; the rest of the novel circled around five
or six one-dimensional characters.
- Two main characters die
with zero emotional impact
- Censoring old films by
digitally editing out any references to cigarette smoking seen as an
unequivocal good.
And we’re teased that the
Mandelbrot Set will play a pivotal role in the book! It doesn’t (save for a
minor, peripheral, weird way), but do yourself a favor and go to Youtube and
watch a video on it. I did, and I think I’m not too obsessed. Really. Not
obsessed at all.
Patch gets an A for
effort picking this out for me. While the review sounds a tad too overtly
negative, it was a page turner and I
did finish it in a couple of days without putting it down. I just think of it
as a wasted opportunity. What magnum opus could someone produce, someone like,
say, Neal Stephenson, with Clarke’s notes for this book!
YMMV.
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