A
tale of the world’s end should be intense, and I love how Cascade is driven by ethical urgency,
its gallows humour lurching grippingly into dead seriousness.
As
ancient magic cataclysmically awakens (in a clear analogue to climate change),
media tycoons, wizards, researchers, and anarchists strive and struggle. Some
hope to mitigate catastrophe; others choose to unleash evil—racism, xenophobia,
the sadistic thrill of the jackboot—for political gain. All politics are petty
at the end of the world, but we remain sadly human.
For
me, what lingers past the final page is a vision of humanity within
catastrophe. If we are our own greatest enemy, we are also the reason we carry
on. Magic, like nature, is indifferent to suffering. To be saved, we must save
each other.
"A near-perfect blend of implacable horror, gallows humor, and ecological apocalypse." -- Peter Watts, author of Blindsight
What does magic want?
When Vasai Singh resurrected drowned Mumbai and raised it into the clouds, the world reacted with awe and wonder -- and no small amount of fear. As with the climate crisis believed to have caused the Cascade, resurgent magic proved lucky for some, a disaster for many others, and a source of hope and dread for everyone else.
A generation has passed since the Cascade transformed the world,…
To
truly know who you are, I must hear your story. So it is with “Maya,” the
narrator of this extraordinarily original novel. To learn her identity, we must
trace the tale of her existence within a Mesolithic federation of villages
struggling with food scarcity.
I’ve
never read a novel like Noema; this
starts with its setting. Its meticulous depiction of complex lifeways humanizes
Mesolithic people and culture. These communities, like ours, confront a
changing planet; scarcity and instability trigger human savagery. Their survival depends on
finding harmony.
Through
all this, we explore who “Maya” is and, in so doing, confront the ambiguities
of identity. This duality—part meditation on humanity’s role in nature, part
investigation into selfhood—is one thing that makes Noema memorable to me.
"This is a story about some things that happened to me about twelve thousand years ago."
With these words, the narrator begins her account of events set at the crucial point in human evolution, when hunter-gathering began to be abandoned as way of life just as the first signs of organized religion emerged. Who or what the narrator is, and how she can speak to us today of events in our distant past, become clear as she describes her existence amongst the sophisticated people of the Mesolithic era - people identical to ourselves but with very different views of the…
This
book’s vivid originality and dark, immersive power gripped me. Kaschock
reinvents storytelling to serve a story that couldn’t be told any other way.
Sleight is a kinetic performance art that could only exist on the page, making it
doubly remarkable how fully Kaschock convinces us of its eerie power and
destructive potential. Sisters Lark and Clef, both sleightists, have been
marked and maimed by the art; their otherworldly capabilities are enlisted by
iconoclastic, amoral impresario West to fashion a performance in which art
becomes atrocity.
Kaschock
trusts readers to do the work of reading—to linger on notions that zig when we
expect them to zag. The world she drops us into is bewildering but
painstakingly constructed; her words captivate with linguistic surprises and
penumbral malaise, sadness, and threat.
Sisters Lark and Clef have spent their lives honing their bodies for sleight, an interdisciplinary art form that combines elements of dance, architecture, acrobatics, and spoken word. After being estranged for several years, the sisters are reunited by a deceptive and ambitious sleight troupe director named West who needs the sisters' opposing approaches to the form Lark is tormented and fragile, but a prodigy; Clef is driven to excel, but lacks the spark of artistic genius.
When a disturbing mass murder makes national headlines, West seizes on the event as inspiration for his new performance, one that threatens to destroy…
Bellatrix
Sakakino has lived many lives. She dampens electricity. She longs for a fruit
that went extinct before she was born. She’s radioactive. She’s not above
committing a massacre for the sake of a perfect omelet.
She crashes through
timelines and circumstances, recurring in these flash stories as a tricksterish
film director, a pink hedgehog, a simulation of herself, or a child who can
only speak in dial-up modem shrieks.
Are we the same person we were last year?
Or last week? Or last story? Whimsical and dolorous, ironic and absurd, this
slippery assortment of stories dances around these questions with ambiguous
aplomb.