Connie Williams best known stories focus on Time Travelling historians from the late 21st century in her novels and short stories. While she has written other works, mostly her stories are soft science fiction that all follow a group of late Oxford historians who travel back in time to England disguised as contemporary people.
She has a simple set of rules in place that govern her universe. Deadlines: You can't be alive at the same time twice. No altering past events: her time machine won't even send you back if you will alter major events or else it will send you back hours or days later. This is called slippage and also works to send you to a slightly different time if someone could see you arrive. You can't go to "divergent points" such as triggers for wars or other decisive events in history, where even a small action could have major consequences that history couldn't correct. You can't take things or people back with you, especially if that would alter history. You have to travel through "drop sites", which are certain specific locations where you can time travel and no one will notice you coming or going.
She is one of my favorite current writers and she tends to focus a lot more on plot, dialog, characters, and setting than most other science fiction writers. She does a lot of detailed historical research before writing these stories and the science fiction details are mainly there to advance the usually fairly complex plot. For the most part her books are fairly cheerful and fun (except for the end of Doomsday Book) even when she focuses on fairly serious matters like World War II.
Doomsday Book
This is the darkest and most depressing of her four historian novels, though the first two thirds are not particularly dark. A historian named Kivrin travels back to oxford in 1320, but unknowingly arrives several decades after that. There are two parallel plots involving disease, one a modern deadly strain of influenza that has infected both Kivrin and the technician who sent her back in time and another one with an outbreak of the plague in the 14th century that happens towards the end of the book. Kivrin becomes delusional from the influenza when she arrives in the past and can't remember her drop site, while the local contemporaries think she is a runaway nun since she can do things like read and write. She becomes stranded in the past since the future time influenza outbreak means no one can come and rescue her for fear of spreading the disease. Soon after becoming stranded the black death arrives in her village and wipes out the local population while she can do nothing to stop it.
Doomsday Book won both the Nebula and Hugo awards for best novel and was nominated for other awards. It is fairly dramatic and presents a interesting description of 14th century English life. It has several memorable characters and the disease story lines in particular are extremely tense. Like some of her other work she includes some religious symbolism in her work, particularly when dealing with the priest of the local church.
For the most part its very appropriate for teenage and above audience and will appeal to people interested in the middle ages and history. The only possibly disturbing parts of the book are the vivid descriptions of the plagues the infect the various characters.
No comments:
Post a Comment