The Unraveling
by Benjamin Rosenbaum
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In the distant future, somewhere in the galaxy, a world has evolved where each person has multiple bodies, cybernetics has abolished privacy, and individual and family success are reliant upon instantaneous evaluations of how well each member conforms to the rigid social system. Young Fift is an only child of the Staid gender, struggling to maintain zir position in the system while developing a friendship with the acclaimed bioengineer Shria--a controversial and intriguing friendship, since show more Shria is Vail-gendered. Soon Fift and Shria unintentionally wind up at the center of a scandalous art spectacle which turns into a multilayered Unraveling of society. Fift is torn between zir attraction to Shria and the safety of zir family, between staying true to zir feelings and social compliance ... when zir personal crises suddenly take on global significance. What's a young Staid to do when the whole world is watching? show lessTags
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Rosenbaum, Benjamin. The Unraveling. Erewhon, 2020.
If science fiction has one persistent structural issue, it is exposition. How much information does a reader need to understand, say, life on a distant planet in the far future? Some writers, such as Kim Stanley Robinson, provide large infodumps that orient the reader but break the narrative flow. In The Unraveling, Benjamin Rosenbaum operates very differently. His approach is to require a reader to gather information about his narrative world inductively. The narrative thus proceeds without interruption, but it risks confusing some readers. This is especially true in The Unraveling, because Rosenbaum is at pains to put the trans in trans-human. Our protagonist, Fift, has five parents show more and three bodies in which Fift is simultaneously conscious. Gender is no longer divided into male and female, because one’s genitals and their associated plumbing are now a fashion choice, easily combined and changed. Gender is now divided into staid and vail, each with its own set of pronouns. Reproduction is now a group decision, and interactions between staid and vail genders is strictly limited by community secrets and taboos. Understanding how all this works (or doesn’t work) engages more of the reader’s attention than the plot. One hardly notices, for example, that buried somewhere in it is a rather good coming of age story. The only book to which I can compare The Unraveling is Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed. That is rarified company for a novel to share. It’s worth the work. 4 strong stars. show less
If science fiction has one persistent structural issue, it is exposition. How much information does a reader need to understand, say, life on a distant planet in the far future? Some writers, such as Kim Stanley Robinson, provide large infodumps that orient the reader but break the narrative flow. In The Unraveling, Benjamin Rosenbaum operates very differently. His approach is to require a reader to gather information about his narrative world inductively. The narrative thus proceeds without interruption, but it risks confusing some readers. This is especially true in The Unraveling, because Rosenbaum is at pains to put the trans in trans-human. Our protagonist, Fift, has five parents show more and three bodies in which Fift is simultaneously conscious. Gender is no longer divided into male and female, because one’s genitals and their associated plumbing are now a fashion choice, easily combined and changed. Gender is now divided into staid and vail, each with its own set of pronouns. Reproduction is now a group decision, and interactions between staid and vail genders is strictly limited by community secrets and taboos. Understanding how all this works (or doesn’t work) engages more of the reader’s attention than the plot. One hardly notices, for example, that buried somewhere in it is a rather good coming of age story. The only book to which I can compare The Unraveling is Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Dispossessed. That is rarified company for a novel to share. It’s worth the work. 4 strong stars. show less
four and a half stars for the most brilliant and thought-provoking book i've read in a long time. a look at the far future on another planet, where gender is based on type not sexuality because body modification is so rampant, an individual having nine bodies (all conscious and independent) to coordinate is not unusual, family dynamics and social engagement are everything (with all the problems entailed), disease is unknown, and immortality is within sight. go now and read it, marvelling at how very much of the underpinnings have been completely thought through (and even more marvellously, realized on the page); it's exceedingly brilliant sociologically and also as a vivid story with real characters, and although the writer's choice is show more to throw the reader in at the deep end, the shock of the water does not last long, and everything goes err... swimmingly after the first few strokes. show less
A very brain-intensive read, with the prose structure closely echoing the experience of being one person in multiple bodies which are frequently in different places at the same time, each one having its own conversation with someone else. The world is also one where gender roles are both entirely divorced from biological sex and also rigidly determined in ways orthogonal to current Western gender roles (and just about equally as useless at mapping to people's actual personalities), and increased longevity means families consist of massive polycules of dozens of spouses working together to raise a single child at a time under the omnipresent and ever-judging eye of the entire networked community.
This alien culture was simultaneously show more really engaging, while serving to distance a bit from the characters and plot. I had sympathy for the main character, but their host of bickering parents were not pleasant to read about even as they illustrated the tensions beneath the surface of stability maintained by society with such determination.
Adolescent rebellion and societal revolution prove equally inevitable. Forbidden love triumphs. On the plot level I felt a bit meh, but the world-building left lots of thinky thoughts and possibilities floating around my head. show less
This alien culture was simultaneously show more really engaging, while serving to distance a bit from the characters and plot. I had sympathy for the main character, but their host of bickering parents were not pleasant to read about even as they illustrated the tensions beneath the surface of stability maintained by society with such determination.
Adolescent rebellion and societal revolution prove equally inevitable. Forbidden love triumphs. On the plot level I felt a bit meh, but the world-building left lots of thinky thoughts and possibilities floating around my head. show less
Well, dang. This book is an excellent test of reading comprehension, specifically trying to figure things out from context clues. It is both entertaining and baffling, and I wonder how many gender studies classes will make it required reading. I am extremely impressed.
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