The Thousandth Floor No. 2: The Dazzling Heights. By Katharine McGee. Harper. $18.99.
Red Queen No. 1. By Victoria
Aveyard. HarperTeen. $22.99.
Back in 1975, J.G. Ballard wrote a chilling dystopian novel called High-Rise, in which a 40-story building
becomes a microcosm for the breakdown of societal norms along the lines of Lord of the Flies, but with even more
violence and with some implications of class stratification to complicate
matters. Katharine McGee may not know Ballard’s book, but she may very well be
familiar with the film of the same name, released in 2015 – because McGee’s own
take on essentially the same story, The
Thousandth Floor, dates to 2016. The film makes the class struggle explicit
to a much greater degree than did the novel, specifically with upper-class
people living on higher floors and lower-class ones below, very much along the
lines of Upstairs, Downstairs and
similar dramas on TV as well as film. That is exactly the arrangement that McGee
uses. True, she expands the building’s size to 1,000 stories, but that is an
arbitrary number designed to fit the scene of what is supposedly New York in
the year 2118. McGee also turns the plot into a straightforward
teenager-focused melodrama, populating the story with a mishmash of typecast
characters and having them interact in ways that are supposed to be explosive
but by and large are simply formulaic. As in Ballard’s novel and the film
adaptation, McGee’s setting has some intriguing SF elements, in McGee’s work’s
case from holography to communication-enabling contact lenses. But McGee
downplays these so as to spend more time, indeed far more time, on
interpersonal drama. In The Dazzling
Heights, the sequel to The Thousandth
Floor, there is – as in the first book – no real social commentary, none of
the concerns about society and dystopic capitalism that pervaded Ballard’s book
and came through as well in the film made from it. Instead, The Dazzling Heights is a kind of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous with
the reassurance, for those who are neither rich nor famous, that wealth and
fame bring only heartache, violence and generalized misery. The plot strands of
the first book are worked through and worked over in this second one. Troubled
relationships abound, as do deep secrets, the latter being exploited by the
vicious Leda Cole to blackmail witnesses to her murder of Eris Dodd-Radson.
Hangers-on and wannabes are all around, including new-to-the-scene Calliope
Brown and her mother, whose main aim is to take advantage of the richer
building residents when they are not taking advantage of each other. Also
ever-present are parties of the “desperation” type, with a kind of
fiddling-while-the-world-burns style. The various events are multiply narrated,
resulting in considerable repetition as McGee has different characters give
their viewpoints on the same matters. Unfortunately, the narrative voices are
so similar that this device bogs down the story instead of turning it into a
where-does-the-truth-really-lie example of the Rashomon effect. The Dazzling Heights tends to be more
blindingly obvious than dazzling – it will be suitably involving for readers who
found The Thousandth Floor intriguing
and are unfamiliar with this sequence’s many derivative elements.
As
a series, Victoria Aveyard’s four-novel Red
Queen grouping is also deeply formulaic, in this case in a
vaguely-medieval-fantasy-dystopic way rather than a vaguely-futuristic-dystopic
one. The very first of the novels, Red
Queen, which dates to 2015, is now available in a new blood-red edition
(including red-edged pages as well as nearly all-red covers) that provides a
chance to revisit the start of the sequence or discover it anew for those who
are so inclined. The underlying plot contrivance here is that there are people
with two kinds of blood, ordinary red and upper-class silver; the Silvers rule,
and all of them have powers (whose origins and ties to their blood are never
clearly explained). Silvers can control flame or water, read minds, teleport,
cause plants to grow, control metal – basically, they have whatever powers
Aveyard needs them to have to advance the plot. They rule not through clever,
much less benevolent, use of those powers, but through old-fashioned
manipulation and violence, allowing Aveyard to divide the world neatly if
obviously into the good-but-powerless and the powerful-but-evil. Red Queen protagonist Mare Barrow proves
the exception to the blood-power rule – this will scarcely surprise anyone who
has ever read any kind of “guttersnipe makes good” story – when it turns out that,
despite her red blood, she can take electrical energy into her body and
manipulate it. The Silvers need to conceal the fact that a mere Red can do
this, so they concoct an origin story for Mare and have her betrothed her to a
prince of the realm. All this occurs against a background of constant war, in
which a group of Reds called the Scarlet Guard is fighting the ruling Silvers.
The Scarlet Guard’s leader is Diana Farley, one of several strong female
characters in Red Queen, both good
and bad; this may help make Red Queen
appealing to the teenage girls who are clearly its intended audience. It is
best if would-be readers are unfamiliar with fantasy tropes, though, since so
many of them drive the plot here, including Mare’s dedication to her family,
her ability to be a catalyst for change and even for revolution, her
confronting of the ways in which apparently helpful characters turn out to be
enemies, and a variety of wholly unexceptional twists and turns that eventually
lead to the discovery that Mare’s favorite and closest brother, whom she
believed dead, is alive after all. There is very little surprising in Red Queen, which Aveyard followed with Glass Sword (2016), King’s Cage (2017), and the forthcoming War Storm, which will conclude the series. The strength of many
female characters is a plus, but the concomitant bland insipidity of the males
is a minus, although the intended readership may not mind it at all. The palace
intrigues and various battles are handled well enough, but there is little unexpected
in any of the outcomes, and few surprises in the romantic entanglements, petty
jealousies and betrayals that seem equally to characterize teen-focused novels
in pretty much every genre.
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