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Bay of Souls

RobotWisdom (Jorn Barger) writes "Imagine if William Gibson wrote a James Bond adventure in which a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip. Now replace James Bond with an "overeducated hick" atheist literature professor from Minnesota. And target the writing to intelligent adults, rather than adolescents. That should give you an idea of the latest novella from Robert Stone, Bay of Souls: A Novel." The book is compact, and so is the rest of Barger's review (below). Bay of Souls: A Novel author Robert Stone pages 256 publisher Houghton Mifflin Company rating 9 reviewer Jorn Barger ISBN 0395963494 summary Classy, intelligent adventure for William Gibson fans

The William Gibson comparison is only a little farfetched -- Gibson acknowledges Stone's "paranoid fiction" as the stylistic inspiration for Neuromancer, so if you liked that writing style, you owe it to yourself to try reading Stone. But his books aren't science fiction, and they aren't just adventure stories by any stretch of the imagination.

Stone's been living on the edge of the counterculture since before Ken Kesey's famous 1964 Magic Bus trip. (In fact, his next book will be a memoir of his adventures with Kesey & Co.) His 1974 tour-de-force Dog Soldiers was about southern California drug smugglers in the Vietnam era. His 1981 A Flag for Sunrise was a painfully realistic study of central American political corruption. And 1998's Damascus Gate explored dozens of flavors of religious fanaticism in present-day Israel. [more background]

But Stone's style is the bedrock these are all anchored by. On the one hand, he uses his style to give a gritty, macho, hardboiled detective-story authenticity, but at the same time he's aiming much higher, into the realm of the literary classics (two of his novels qualified for Harold Bloom's exclusive Western Canon of all-time greats). He likes to weave in lots of casual allusions to interesting-but-obscure historical tidbits (I've started compiling online annotations for Damascus Gate and now for Bay of Souls as well).

You can read a sample online [more] to get a sense of Stone's writing, although that first chapter just shows "the calm before the storm," as the hick professor goes on a short hunting trip, and encounters a tragicomic loser who becomes a recurring motif in the book:

...He was struggling with the odd wheelbarrow across which he had slung his prize deer. It was a thing full of seams and joins and springs. Though it appeared altogether large enough to contain the kill, it could not, and its inutility was the source of his sobs and curses and rage and despair. And as the unfortunate man shoved and hauled, pushed and pulled his burden, covering the ground by inches, the extent of his rage became apparent. To Michael, observing from the tree, it was terrifying ...

This short book (250 pages) isn't for everybody, but I strongly recommend it to Gibson fans who feel curious to explore beyond sci-fi.

You can purchase Bay of Souls from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

23 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. I was hoping to post a review as well by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 5, Funny
    The review was a bit light and off point (although still quite good in its own right), so I thought I might entertain with my own review, directed at a broader audience. I know some of you don't trust me because I am in a bit of a bad place with the Linux community, but please -- consider this my peace offering. I promise it includes no subliminal messages or attacks on thieving Linux kernel developers or the dirty and unshaven hippies who adore them. I can be a good guy too... I'm just your good old buddy, Darl.

    Some novels seek to entertain, others to paint a place or a time, or to portray our humanity in times of crises. Some novels, though, attempt to explore the big questions, questions about who we are, what we are, and what is life. Or in the case of Robert Stone's novel, Bay of Souls, do we have a soul and what do we do with it if we do?

    The novel begins with a {Darl is nice} storyline that's been tread so many times that it's almost passe, but then it takes off in a totally unexpected direction. Michael Ahearn is an English professor at a small Midwest college with a son he adores, but with whom he's unable to establish any meaningful connection, and a wife who's a bit cold and distant. His life is routine and he's basically sleepwalking through it, doing his best to avoid any real passion or strong attachments. Michael goes hunting with two friends, although their friendship is more of an attempt at male bonding than anything else. Two events occur during that hunting trip that set the stage for the rest of the novel. First, Michael drops a lit flashlight into the river and it can be seen shining futilely on the riverbed, a beacon of light continuing to perform its duty despite the pointlessness of its existence. Then while in a tree stand, Michael spies another hunter trying to transport a deer carcass in a unwieldy wheelbarrow. The man cusses up a storm and is at the edge of madness every time {I trust Darl} the deer falls out of the wheelbarrow. Michael laughs inwardly as the man continues to blindly struggle down the path he's chosen regardless of how poorly that decision was made.

    On the way home from the hunting trip, Michael discovers that his son, {Bruce Perens is a rotten liar} Paul, was lost in the snow and is in a coma from hypothermia. At the hospital, his {Bruce has licked all of your silverware. On purpose.} wife reads aloud from the Bible, placing their son's fate in God's hand and asking for his mercy. Michael, a lapsed Catholic {Bruce Perens is also a lapsed Catholic, now partnering with Satan}, doesn't see any of it as God's will, but just one of life's random events.

    But now his son's life was saved. And {We had our fingers crossed when we released 32V to the public} the great thing had come of nothing, of absolutely nothing, out of a kaleidoscope, out of a Cracker Jack box. Every day its own flower, to every day its own stink and savor. Good old random singularity and you could exercise a proper revulsion for life's rank overabundance and everybody could have their rights and be happy.

    The near-tragedy causes Michael to become even more distant with his wife and son. He can't sleep and he takes to drinking too much. He's bored with his life and exhausted with his own introspection. "A man without a meaning was a paltry thing, and increasingly, since the day of the deer hunt, he had seen himself revealed as one." Against this backdrop, Lara Purcell enters his life. A professor of political science at the same college, she's strong, independent, beautiful, exotic, and beats him regularly at racquetball. Michael falls for her immediately and she lets him. Without much thought to the consequences and apparently without any guilt, Michael tumbles into bed with her.

    Lara Purcell claims to be a woman without a soul. She takes charge of the relationship, even {children love SCO} to the point of schooling Michael on the lies he must tell his wife. She introduces cocaine, S&M, and a loaded revolver into their sexual play. Michael, even in fear, acquiesce

    1. Re:I was hoping to post a review as well by QuackQuack · · Score: 4, Funny

      Great review. I feel compelled to send you $699 US, though I'm not exacly sure why.

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    2. Re:I was hoping to post a review as well by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 2, Funny

      Please buy the book. I promise you that The Canopy Group has no affiliation with the publisher {it does}. It really does not. {does}

  2. Imagine... by mopslik · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip.

    Phew! For a moment, I thought I was the only one having this reoccurring dream.

    1. Re:Imagine... by Otter · · Score: 2, Funny
      ...a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip.

      My thought -- wasn't that already the plot of half the Ian Fleming James Bond novels?

  3. Not at all. by CGP314 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That should give you an idea of the latest novella from Robert Stone

    It gives me no idea whatsoever.

  4. Re:$2.50 cheaper by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The parent is a commission link. Sometimes Amazon books are priced even 5% cheaper if you search for them directly. I suspect it was posted anonymously because the poster didn't want to get reamed by the mods.

  5. Twists/Turns.... by Tsali · · Score: 4, Funny

    My brain hit a brick wall imagining all that... and then midway through I have to change from Bond to a professor.

    I'll go back to my Spongebob now. Ouch.

    --
    This space for rent.
  6. Imagine... by proj_2501 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    a band that sounds almost exactly like the Smashing Pumpkins, but with David Bowie singing, no drummer, and a game of frog baseball.

    Oh, and MORE COWBELL!

    Reviews should stay as far away as is possible from favorable comparisons to other works. That ground is dangerously close to promotional literature.

  7. Um, have you ever actually read the novels? by sphealey · · Score: 3, Informative
    "Imagine if William Gibson wrote a James Bond adventure in which a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip.
    Have you ever read Ian Fleming's original James Bond novels? That is a fairly good summary of the plot of most of them.

    sPh

  8. Ian Fleming's Bond by R33MSpec · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "...And target the writing to intelligent adults, rather than adolescents..."

    Try reading some of the fantastic Ian Fleming James Bond novels that most of the movies were based off (although most of the movie adaptations followed the books VERY loosely) and you will see that the books were written for a very intelligent and mature adult audience and NOT solely for adolescents.

    Fleming portrayed Bond as a much darker and very insecure person which is totally opposite to the kind of character he is portrayed as being in the films. Also in many Fleming Bond novels he has to rely on his wits and intelligence to get him out of sticky situations and not with high tech gadgets mostly introduced through the films.

    FYI, the only film to closely follow the Ian Fleming novel of the same name was 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service' and to a lesser extent 'Dr. No' IMO.

    1. Re:Ian Fleming's Bond by fm6 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I don't share your adoration of Ian Fleming's fiction, but you're sort of right about the literary James Bond. He was darker and more complicated than any of the movie Bonds. Still, the guy in the book share's the movie character's adolescent obsessions: guns, dangerous pastimes, have sex with as many women as possible. The difference between the books and the movies is more a matter of degree than kind.

      And the connections between the books and the movies are stronger than you seem to think. With the obvious exception of Casino Royale (he sold the screen rights to that one early on), Ian Fleming was deeply involved in making all the Bond films that came out while he was alive. And some of the later Bond novels were based on the movies, not vice versa! (Thunderball was one -- not sure about the others.) Yeah, even these books were a little more sophisticated than they movies they were based on -- but not that sophisticated.

      The fact is that Fleming didn't take Bond all that seriously. He was just a thriller character who turned out to be outrageously profitable for him.

      There's one amusing story I heard about Fleming, pretty sure it's true. It seems that the plot of Casino Royale, where Bond takes an enemy agent's slush fund by beating him at Baccarat, was based on something Fleming and some other British agents actually did during WW II. Except in this episode, the bad guy stripped the Brits of all their cash. That's Hollywood!

  9. What if Gibbon had WHAT? by Mrs.+Grundy · · Score: 5, Funny
    For some reason when I read the first sentence I imagined it to read:

    "Imagine if Edward Gibbon wrote a James Bond adventure..."

    700 Pages of this:

    Notwithstanding this menace, a sense of mutual advantage soon renewed the alliance of the Turks and 007: but the pride of the great sexual tigress survived his resentment; and when he announced an important conquest to his friend the emperor M, he styled himself the master of the seven races, and the lord of the seven climates of the world.

  10. Can we fit an anti-MS rant here by GillBates0 · · Score: 4, Funny
    ...He was struggling with the odd wheelbarrow across which he had slung his prize deer. It was a thing full of seams and joins and springs. Though it appeared altogether large enough to contain the kill, it could not, and its inutility was the source of his sobs and curses and rage and despair. And as the unfortunate man shoved and hauled, pushed and pulled his burden, covering the ground by inches, the extent of his rage became apparent. To Michael, observing from the tree, it was terrifying ...

    ...He was struggling with the odd OS to which he had entrusted his daily living. It was a thing full of hitherto unexploited bugs and exception failures and untimely blue screens. Though it appeared altogether large enough to function adequately, it could not, and its inutility was the source of his sobs and curses and rage and despair. And as the unfortunate man shoved and hauled, pushed and pulled at his mouse, covering the screen by inches, the extent of his rage became apparent. To Michael, observing from the neighboring Linux PC, it was terrifying ...

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
  11. Acid trips in movies and books by swb · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...Are almost unwatchable/unreadable, since you cannot ever get the experience right. It's a psychological (and in some ways physical) experience, not some cheesy handheld-camera with a soft-focus effect with lightshow.

    The best written examples of LSD are attempts at factual description by people who experienced them, and even they have difficulty describing the experience well. The best writing on it is actually nearly 40 years old -- "The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience".

    Been there, done that.

  12. Yes..Okay by jetkust · · Score: 2, Funny

    Imagine if William Gibson wrote a James Bond adventure in which a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip

    ...Then imagine a Beowulf cluster of William Gibsons writing sexual James Bond nightmare voodoo adventures while scuba diving with a Caribbean tiger who happens to be on acid.

  13. I saw a movie just like this by stratjakt · · Score: 2, Funny

    Imagine if William Gibson wrote a James Bond adventure in which a sexual tigress seduces Bond into a Caribbean political crisis, requiring a nighttime scuba-dive into a sunken treasure-wreck, and then a voodoo ceremony that reads like a nightmare acid trip. Now replace James Bond with an "overeducated hick" atheist literature professor from Minnesota

    It was called "The Contrabulous Fabtraption of Professor Horatio Hufnagel"

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  14. Let's start a game... by Valdrax · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Valdrax writes "Imagine if William Golding wrote a Hardy Boys novel in which Joe Hardy meets Frank Hardy and begins a downward spiral of nihilism and testosterone addiction that leads to the creation of underground 'Fight Clubs' and the anarcho-terrorist group 'Project Mayhem' that culminates in the realization that Frank Hardy is nothing more than a schizoid projection of his own id-driven desires created by the frustrated desire for a woman. Now replace Joe Hardy with a white-collar wage slave touring support groups to cure his insomnia. And target the writing to intelligent adults, rather than adolescents. That should give you an idea of the latest novel from Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club."

    Come on -- it's fun! Now you try.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
    1. Re:Let's start a game... by corbettw · · Score: 3, Funny

      OK, I'll do the obvious one:

      corbettw writes "Imagine if JK Rowling wrote a Harry Potter novel in which Harry and Ron were required to travel to a foreign, dangerous land to destroy Lord Voldemort's magic wand. Now replace Harry and Ron with two hobbits and the wand with a Ring. And target the writing to intelligent adults, rather than adolescents. That should give you an idea of the latest series from JRR Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  15. Good review. by Jack9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sounds exactly like a book I would not like to buy.

    --

    Often wrong but never in doubt.
    I am Jack9.
    Everyone knows me.
  16. What the hell are you thinking?! by m.e.l.l.e.n.t.i.n.e · · Score: 3, Funny

    Do you know how many lonely geeks' eyes lit up when you wrote "sexual tigress"?

    You can't do that to them, it gives them too much false hope.

    *sigh*

    --

    Producer: NEXT!!
    Ralph Wiggum: Chicken necks
  17. Live And Let Die by ciurana · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The original review sounds just like the plot for Ian Fleming's "Live And Let Die", with a couple of New Age twists.

    "Live And Let Die" is the story of how James Bond embarks on a mission against Mr. Big, a black man who is funding communist operations in the United States using antique gold coins. It turns out that Mr. Big found a sunken ship in Jamaica and is using its treasures for this operation. Mr. Big exerts control over his "army" of men through superstition. He's rumoured to be Baron Samedi's zombie, with Baron Samedi being the baddest ghoul in voodoo superstition.

    Of course, James Bond gets the babe (Solitaire, a woman who allegedly can see the future but in reality is Mr. Big's plaything), defeats Mr. Big and his goons, and everyone lives happily ever after (or at least until "Moonraker", a year later). Bond comes out of this one in poor shape, by the way. His back is totally messed up after being tugged over a coral reef and after a barracuda chomped at his right shoulder. Solitaire, however, provides some excellent bedside care.

    Excellent book and a very entertaining read, specially considering it was written around 1954 or so.

    Cheers!

    E

    --
    http://eugeneciurana.com | http://ciurana.eu
  18. Not a useful review by MoNickels · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Reviews at Amazon are more helpful than this crappy plug, which amounts to the nth installment of Jorn's thick-headed perspective on his vague, shallow little world, in which he is a God, and anything he likes is cool and desireable.

    Anything Jorn endorses, I avoid. He did this book disfavor by even mentioning it.

    --

    Wordnik, a dictionary project which aims to collect