Friday, March 18, 2016

A cli-fi novel by Jenni Fagan in the UK -- ''THE SUNLIGHT PILGRIMS''

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‘The Sunlight Pilgrims’ -- by Jenni Fagan


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The temperature drops by 50C over the course of Jenni Fagan’s new novel. The Sunlight Pilgrims begins, in the autumn of 2020, at a chilling minus six, and by late March and the end of the book has descended to an unsurvivable minus 56C. There’s a giant iceberg looming off the coast of Scotland, schools have closed and people are freezing to death in their homes and their cars, lost in snowdrifts that rise up above windows. This is climate change made palpably, physically real: not a policy issue, or abstract threat, but a day-to-day fight to stay alive.

 

 

In a caravan park in Scotland, Constance and Stella — mother and daughter — try to keep warm, and sane, and befriend a new grief-stricken neighbour, Dylan, who has moved north after the death of his beloved mother and grandmother, and the closure of the tiny art-house Soho cinema in which he was raised. They are a spirited, eccentric trio: Dylan makes his own gin, Constance likes to wear a wolf costume made by one of her two boyfriends, and Stella is only recently Stella, mid-transition from being Cael, a 12-year-old boy.
Stella carries the novel — a bold, outspoken, sensitive kid who swears hyperactively and withstands the taunts of the classmates mystified and amused by her new gender. Like Anais, the in-care, trouble-hungry heroine of Fagan’s much-lauded first novel The Panopticon, Stella inhabits a societal edgeland. She doesn’t quite fit conventional expectation of how a person should be; she defies norms and rules. And her interactions with the state reveal its lack of understanding and of basic human sympathy — a doctor, for example, who tries to prescribe her Prozac rather than the hormone-blockers she so desperately wants in order to erase her burgeoning facial hair.
Luckily, she has Constance — her fearless, survivalist mother who can make stoves and soup and furniture, and knows how to wield an axe. Constance, however, suffers, a slight misfortune in the book, as the character who is required to divulge necessary information about its central themes. In a conversation about gender with her daughter, she recites a list of fish on the male-and-female spectrum — “angel fish, sea bass, snook, clown fish, wrasse” — and can remember when the last iceberg came to Scotland: “Treshnish in 1902”. Even Stella feels compelled to call her out on her unlikely internal encyclopedia: “I love the way your brain stores random trivia.”

This is climate change made palpably real: not an abstract threat, but a day-to-day fight to stay alive
 
Fagan’s vivid, poetic-prose style injects the book with energy. She writes at the pace of thought, sentences like gunfire: “A roar. The wind. Her heartbeat.” She has a poet’s affection for precision and image, for the exact way a first moustache might feel (“[like] a duckling’s belly”). And she’s deft at lodging in her characters’ minds and bodies, unveiling their interior self, whether in Stella’s furious isolation or Dylan’s primal lusting after Constance. But at times the book can feel burdened by its dual subjects, of climate change and transgender children, and the heavy morality to which they come attached. There are parts that make you wonder if Fagan started with the themes first, a laudable desire to make a fiction out of ambitious, enormous ideas, and fitted the story and characters around them later. Her attempt at knitting her concerns together is not always comfortable, as in this email exchange between Stella and a friend:

 
“‘What’s the weather like there? Are you scared it’s an Ice Age?’

Stella finishes combing her hair while she thinks about it. She types a reply: ‘More scared about how to go through transition, don’t know how to do it.’”

There is also the dramatic challenge of the characters becoming trapped by the elements. As temperatures drop, momentum falls away too, and though Fagan’s depiction of the encroaching, consuming winter is powerful, weather only takes you so far. But perhaps that’s the point. The novel’s central concern is survival, basic existence, the things — humour, friendship, sex — that bind us together when life is barely liveable, and that might be purpose enough.

The Sunlight Pilgrims, by Jenni Fagan, William Heinemann, RRP£12.99, 320 pages

 
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2016. You may share using your media tools as this is an international emergency we are facing and we need all hands working together to fight it.

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