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4/20/10

Blackout, by Connie Willis, for Timeslip Tuesday

Blackout, by Connie Willis(Ballantine Books, 2010, 491 pages)

In previous novels --Doomesday Book (1993), and To Say Nothing of the Dog (1999), Connie Willis sent history students travelling back in time from a future Oxford. Blackout is set in this same universe, a few years down the line. Things are getting a little harried at the time travel control center, what with people popping in and out of time and space, demanding accents and golf lessons and era-appropriate clothing and props. Schedules are being changed with little notice, there are temporal slippages, and one theorist is warning that there might be issues, as it were, with time travel...

Three students of history are busily studying aspects of World War II. Merope is embedded as a maid at a country house full of evacuees, Polly is off to London to work as a shop girl during the blitz, and Michael is studying "heroism," and plans to interview a sample of Dunkirk rescue participants. All are pretty confident that the boss of time travel operations, Mr. Dunworthy, won't let anything bad happen to them. After all, he's been very particular in his insistence that they not stay in particular places that are going to be bombed, and that sort of thing.

But then things go wrong. The war seems to be progressing as it should. But Michael shouldn't have been able to actually take part in the evacuation of Dunkirk. Merope shouldn't have been trapped by a measles epidemic. And Polly's way home has been bombed... Surrounded by the chaos and death of WW II, the three young time travellers being to wonder if there is a glitch in time...one that might result in a more in-depth experience of the past then anyone would ever want.

This is a book that demands the attention of the reader, and then rewards it tremendously. In many ways, it is like being part of a series of nightmares--the chaos and the confusion experienced by the protagonists (not just in WW II, but in Oxford of 2060, as they try to prepare for their missions) was almost too much for me. The short chapters that jumped between the character's point of view added to my difficulties.

As the book progressed, however, and I got more of a handle on the three main stories I was being told (and the protagonists got more of a handle on their own circumstances), I became fully absorbed in Willis' utterly gripping portrayal of the fall of 1940. During the last two hundred pages or so I might not have blinked, I was so lost to the real world. Willis manages to combine emotional depth with bright surface detail, making for very good reading indeed.

But then came the cliffhanger of an ending. The second book, All Clear (coming this fall) really is, it seems, a continuation, not a sequel. There is NO closure to this book, and nothing is explained. And in consequence, I think I might have read Blackout too carelessly in my riveted state, and missed Important Clues. For instance (not a spoiler), on page 454 a character thinks: "Unless...oh, God, she hadn't even thought of that possibility. She'd assumed...but that was even worse..." And I have no idea at all what this person is thinking....and then the book ended soon after. Argh. I wonder if I am now assuming worse-er things than the character is, or if there are Horrors that haven't crossed my mind.

Blackout is a fine example of the sort of time travel story in which the immersion of the characters in the past is central--it is almost more historical fiction than sci fi/fantasy. But because the characters are from the future, and know what happens, their perceptions of the past that they are living have a certain type of poignancy to them that straight historical fiction doesn't. To be friends with someone you know is dead, to see a cathedral you know will be bombed, is to see the world in a whole different light, and Willis conveys this beautifully.

But you might want to wait a few months more before reading this, until All Clear is out and ready to hand!

8 comments:

  1. Sounds interesting. Thanks for the review.

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  2. I am so excited to see a review of a new Connie Willis book. It's going onto my wishlist.

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  3. Wow this sounds really interesting! I'd never heard of it before. I'll have to look into this series.

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  4. Oh, my WORD. Doomsday Book about killed me, anyway -- I will simply wait 'til the All Clear to read another WWII story of hers. I swear she actually time travels to write them!!!

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  5. I went in knowing it was really Part One of Two, but I simply couldn't wait. It had been so long since her last novel I NEEDED to read it at once.

    I know I'll be rereading this before ALL CLEAR comes out (which, by the way, is nowhere near soon enough for my liking!).

    If you've not read BELLWETHER, I highly recommend it. It's not one of her time travel stories, but it's all manner of happy. Great characters, adorable romance, sheep, Barbie, bread pudding and hair bobbing... what more could one want?

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  6. I love Bellweather! Even though it too, has something of a bad dream-ness to it, it still manages to be wonderfully fun.

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  7. I also went in knowing it was only part I but couldn't wait. I absolutely love Blackout, and will also have to reread it in the fall before All Clear. World War II literature for children and young people is my area of specialization, so I was very excited about these books. Also loved Doomsday Book just as much though.
    Kathryn

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  8. Thank you for reminding me to add my WW II tag to this one! I love WW II books for children too. And even some grown-up ones....I am surprised that this is only my tenth WW II book...although maybe there are others, lurking unlabeled, in the bowels of the blog.

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