|
Mary
Doria Russell
Fiction Writer
Mary Doria
Russell didnt intend to be a science fiction writer; in fact,
she didnt intend to be a writer at all. Armed with a B.A.
in cultural anthropology, an M.A. in social anthropology, and a
Ph.D in biological anthropology, she worked for many years as a
paleoanthropologist, publishing scientific articles on subjects
ranging from bone biology to cannibalism. But she found that she
wanted to consider certain larger philosophical issues at length,
and for that, it seemed, the ideal vehicle was the novel. Besides,
Russell admits, she had eventually become fed up with academia
and quit.
Russell,
a former straight-A Catholic schoolgirl from Chicago who converted
to Judaism, became interested in the way that religion and politics
and science rub against each other. The result was her first novel,
The Sparrow (1996), and its sequel, Children of God (1998).
Her academic knowledge came in handy with both books, as her studies
in linguistics, genetics, anatomy, archaeology, and geology all
found a place in the making of the fantastic world of Rakhat, where
much of the action of the novels takes place.
The fresh
and provocative quality of Russells imagination is signaled
in the opening pages of The Sparrow. In 2016 radio signals
from a distant planet turn out to be songs: mysterious arias in
an unknown language sung in ravishingly beautiful, almost mystical
harmonies. The siren call from across the universe is answered,
not by NASA, but by the Society of Jesus. Feeling called to a pivotal
moment in history, the Jesuits mount an interstellar expedition.
But when
the book opens, the mission is already over. Though the Jesuits
were determined to avoid a replay of what happened when Europe discovered
the New World, something went terribly wrong. The sole member to
return from the ill-fated expedition, Fr. Emilio Sandoz, is now
the subject of an official inquiry.
The Sparrow
is the story of what happened on far-off Rakhat. Children of
God tells the story of Sandozs reluctant return there.
Both books
have been optioned by Universal Studios. Children, a selection
of the Book of the Month Club, was simultaneously released in 1998
on audiotape by Russells publisher, Random House.
The Sparrow,
chosen as one of the top ten books of 1996 by Entertainment Weekly,
has received many awards, including the James Tiptree Jr. Memorial
Prize, the British Science Fiction Associations Best Novel
Award and the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke Prize for Science Fiction.
Its characters are vivid and unforgettable, the plot a cliffhanger,
and the descriptions as readable as the action scenes. Finally,
though, it is the world of Rakhat itself that seduces the reader,
Rakhat, whose inhabitants wear scented ribbons and weave songs of
unbearable beauty and who find that they are longing for freedom.
text by
Mary Grimm
Chair, 1998 Literature Jury
1993 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
|