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Beloved Son (1978)

par George Turner

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The first of Turner's Ethical Culture trilogy, thoughI read this after the second. While Vaneglory is very much a sequel, there's enough change in characters that only the nature of Gangoil was a mystery in the second book. Both books are interesting and ambitious arguments about the design of culture and governance, free will, power, and such, with solid SFnal trappings. The negatives are a tendency to preach (more so in Vaneglory) and pontificate (both books), and, in this book, an unconvincing attempt to make a philosophical debates a motivating force for political and even mob action. The other big weakness in both books is that it's pretty much all white males and testosterone. There are just two women. One, Alice, is mostly a pawn in both books, and the other, the Lady, is a caricature of decadent immortality.

Recommended if you can look past the weaknesses. ( )
2 voter ChrisRiesbeck | Jan 12, 2021 |
My reactions to reading this novel in 1993. Spoilers follow.

This includes most of the themes and features of Turner’s other work I’ve read.

There is the concern with the biological sciences and their awesome power. Here that is manifested in that popular late seventies sf topic – the clone – and successive genetic manipulations to create types of supermen. Some clone lines are for developing superior reflexes, memory, and engineering ability. Other, seemingly trivial (but important to the ultimate plot) test the genetic influences on homosexuality. More bizarre variations and experiments in biology include truncated heads (with the brain in the chest). Of course, as is common in the clone sub-genre, the clones are telepathic and (also common) form sort of a non-violent (it’s ok for others to kill for them, just not for them to do it personally) religion around their natural born progenitor and main character, Albert Raft.

There are the related themes of an overpopulated, polluted, secret, nationalistic world starting a war shortly after an expedition leaves for Barnard’s Star. The war features limited nuclear weapon use but is fought covertly by some unknown (the identity has been lost after the war) power using biologically engineered weapons against various nation’s peoples and agriculture. Turner’s concern with biology also shows up in a scene where Raft chides the others during a discussion on what Earth will be like upon their return. They talk about advances in engineering and non-biological sciences. He scornfully tells them that most of things they are talking about are on the drawing boards already, that the real action will be in biology. This sort of oblique shot at sf (most of the things discussed are sf type technology) is also manifested in Turners’s Brain Child where sf writers seem uninterested in real science and technology.

Oddly enough, given Turner’s skill at characterization, the characters are more types here than in his other works. (Turner, in a critical article, has said an sf story’s setting is more than the characters.) It’s also obvious early on that the Lady, who Raft hates pathologically, is his mother. Raft, obssessive in his hate of biology and his mother, murderous when his authority is questioned, a superb physical specimen, is the book’s most interesting character. Like Turner’s Drowning Tower and, to a lesser extant, The Destiny Makers, this is a dialectical novel. (The dialect in The Destiny Makers is a covert one between viewing life as sacred and the philosophy of the cull.)

This is also a future based on murder. The Omsbudsmen, survivors of the Five Days (the war that occurred in 1992 – this novel mainly takes place in 2032), killed many of their fellows who didn’t approve of their new order of Security. In another explicit attack on some sf, the post-holocaust period after the Five Days is relatively brief and not at all the barborous, kill-or-be-killed medieavel period of many novels. Turner presents an equally plausible alternative of survivors who nostalgically remember modern conveniences and are determined to have them again. They have enough organizational and technical skills – as well as stored information – to do just that. The fact that the Five Days is not a total war makes this easier to do though I would argue that modern civilization is more fragile and less easily restored than Turner thinks. They create a state where every group of people in the world can pursue their own cultural and political experiments free from coercion by other states. Unfortunately, it’s only a temporary state of affairs built on psychological coercion and conditioning, repression of youthful exuberance and play with a high suicide rate by the young, and turning a blind eye to internal repression. Educational techniques have grown very sophisticated and teenagers can easily get the equivalent of a college education and pursue adult professions very young.

Most of the returning starfarers meet unpleasant ends upon returning to their very altered countries – America has gone commie, Russia has become a theocracy – especially since those countries think they have valueable secrets from Raft. Things are ripe for revolution in this world, and that’s just what Raft, his grandson Ian Campion, and policeman and Christian Parker provide. With the help of starfarer and psychologist Lindley – expert in psychological manipulation, they pull the wool over the naïve eyes of this world and, using a sham telepathy, convince this world, via a new religion to accept the evil in man’s thoughts since such thoughts will surely be bared via new technology and telepathy. Lindley, though, gets disgusted by the lies of the Revolution. Even Parker and Campion realize they are becoming the authoritarian types they’re revolting against. He seems to think civilization can’t be based on honesty, an attitude that forms a major part of Turner’s The Destiny Makers.

The book ends with some unusual black humor. Linkley complains bitterly about being exiled into space with some clones when one says, in the novel’s final words, “We’re only doing our best for you. Some people are never satisfied.”. In the three political systems – our world, the Omsbudsmen’s world, and the post-Revolution – depicted in this novel are any indication, Turner seems to cynically (typical for Turner) think no government’s best – no matter their motives – is good enough. ( )
1 voter RandyStafford | Feb 20, 2013 |
Good writing, surprising plot twists. Colorful characterizations (exaggerated in some cases). A little dated with cold-war division of the world and its peoples (communism vs western ideologies etc). Ominously focused on the evils of biotech - various diseases, cloning etc. ( )
  betula.alba | Aug 9, 2009 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
George Turnerauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Peterson, EricArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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