Review of George Turner's A Pursuit of Miracles
A Pursuit of Miracles is a
fabulously entertaining and thought provoking collection of science fiction short
stories. It maintains the exceptionally high standards of George Turner’s many
novels. Turner is arguably Australia’s best ever science fiction writer and
this collection shows why.
There are only eight stories in the collections 207 pages,
so they are mostly long stories. All but one of Turner’s nine published short
stories are in the collection. Turner preferred to write novels. Indeed, at
least two of the stories in this collection were later turned into novels.
Turner was obviously a proud Australian as most of the
stories are set in a future Australia. He seemed to be fascinated with
telepathy which is the main theme, or in the background, of a number of the
stories. Turner also seemed very much concerned with humanity’s destruction of
the environment. The collection was published in 1990 and the stories have not
dated.
The collection begins with the title story A
Pursuit of Miracles. It’s a story that snuck on me as I wondered about
the emotional intelligence of the scientists involved. It is set in a world
were very few animals live. In a research lab, scientists are attempting to see
if the animals that remain can be controlled by telepathy. But one of the
co-workers, a damaged clone, shows that empathy with animals would have been a much
better option to explore.
The second story, Not in Front of the Children, is a
story about arrogance and ignorance. A privileged teenage girl, who lives in a
world were aging has been slowed, rebels against her parents as she tries to
discover what death is.
Feedback is
a rather strange story, with a very unexpected and weird ending. A hypnotist
and a telepath are brought together by a rich pastoralist on an outback
property. The pastoralist believes that together they might be able to enter
his mind and go back to the beginning of creation. This experiment is watched
over by a solipsistic cultist who believes that the universe is his own imagined
creation.
Shut
the Door When You Go Out later became the brilliant
novel Genetic Soldier. It is one of the shorter pieces in the
collection and is set thousands of years into the future. Most of humanity had
deserted Earth, leaving it to its former indigenous tribes. A ship returns, its
crew wanting to resettle what used to be Australia. But this time, the
genetically altered Aborigines, object to be colonised.
In On the Nursery Floor a reporter
tries to find out what happened at a laboratory years earlier. The laboratory was used to genetic engineer
super intelligent children, who escaped. The reporter tries to track them down.
In
the Petri Dish Upstairs an orbiting community sends the
“perfect” man down to earth to marry a rich heiress. He takes her back to his
community’s huge space station that collects solar power and transmits it to an
earth they no longer feel part of and are sick of being subservient too.
The collection finishes with The Fittest, which is the
best story of the collection. It is set in a Melbourne slowly being inundated
by the sea. Society is split into the Sweet, the 10% of people who have jobs,
and the Swill, the 90% who survive on government handouts.The story revolves around a sweet family whose father loses his job, forcing them to move to
the swill’s slums. But one child is
brilliant with numbers, a talent that makes him valuable to those who don’t
want to leave records on computers. The
Fittest later became The Sea and Summer, which is the
best Australian science fiction novel I have read. It was nominated for a
Nebula Award and won that years Arthur C. Clarke award.
A
Pursuit of Miracles is an extremely strong collection that would
appeal to most readers of science fiction. If you are an Australian science
fiction reader, you simply have to read it and discover how good Australian
science fiction can be.
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