Reviews tagging 'Mental illness'

Machine by Elizabeth Bear

1 review

caryndi's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

After having read Ancestral Night at the beginning of this year, I was very excited to get a new White Space novel so quickly! Though set in the same universe, this book has a different main cast (we do get to see some returning characters,
Cheerilaq and Singer,
though they are not central to the story). Dr. Jens and her friends/crew are the workers on an ambulance ship (and the ambulance ship itself, Sally) that replies to a distress beacon coming off an ancient generation ship that left Earth during the Eschaton.  However, the ship's crew has been locked in quickly-made cryo pods, the AI seems to be compromised in some way, and both the ship that sent the distress signal and its Darboof crew have been put into stasis somehow.  As Dr. Jens tries to solve the mystery, she learns secrets she'd rather not know and has to find a way to put things right.

Like the first book in the series, Machine talks a lot about trauma and how the ability to rightmind allows people like Dr. Jens, who has chronic pain, to overcome their maladaptive reactions to the situations they find themselves in.  However, even tuning one's emotional and physiological responses does not lead to an ideal society.  Rightminded beings can do just as much harm to each other as non-rightminded ones like the captain of the ancient ship
who re-programmed the ship's AI to create cryo pods for its crew in response to a quick-spreading flu virus, even though the pod failure rate was likely far higher than the virus' death rate would have been
.  Additionally, Dr. Jens meets one of the revived members of that ancient crew, who was frozen long before people had foxes, and finds herself liking him despite the way he acts due to the fact that he does not even have the option to tune.  As the emotional toll of the mystery begins to get to Dr. Jens, she at times chooses not to tune in favor of feeling emotions that could be dangerous.  Not to mention, this book raises the question of how much you can trust someone else to tune you, should you find yourselves on different sides.  The narrative still does favor rightminding, but compared to the previous book in the series, it presents a more complex view of it.

I personally enjoyed having a main character who was a woman and
somewhat of a failed mother/wife
and allowed that complexity.  While her actions were not presented as a good thing, nor were they used to invalidate everything else she had done with herself.  In fact, part of her growth was understanding the mistakes she'd made and realizing that, even though she could not necessarily fix them, she could try to do better, both for herself and others.  It was also nice to see a disabled main character, though I would be interested to read a deep dive into Dr. Jens' disability/disability in the universe of the series from a disability scholar and/or someone who deals with chronic pain themself.

Though this book didn't hit me as being as happy as Ancestral Night was (though maybe that's because we're now 8 months into a pandemic), it did have a message of hope: That, even when things are wrong, we can come together and make them better.  That perfection does not exist, but if people do their part, we can make systems that are constantly improving.  That it's worth it to have faith in others, even if that means getting hurt sometimes.

I also want to note, for anyone who has made it this far, that earlier this year I heard allegations that Elizabeth Bear had abused other writers in the sci-fi community.  I want to acknowledge the person who came forward to speak about this (I don't remember their name); though I have not seen Ms. Bear respond, I have no reason at this point to doubt the allegations.  It's always disappointing to learn someone whose work you like has a record of mistreating others; more so when the books you've read by them specifically address the ways trauma we have experienced can lead us to hurt others.  While rightminding doesn't exist in our world, there are ways to address trauma, and I hope for both her sake and the sake of the writer(s) who have lodged complaints against her, Ms. Bear is able to look at her past and see how her actions have hurt others.

Recommend?: Yes.  We need hopeful sci-fi like this, and the characters were both complex and loveable.

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