Category Archives: Martha Wells

Long Looks at Short Fiction: The Forest Boy by Martha Wells

It’s been a while since I’ve done one of the Long Looks at Short Fiction posts.  Far too long a while.  A few weeks ago I reviewed The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells and griped a little bit about having to wait on the order of a year before the sequel is published.I really enjoyed the world Wells created and have wanted to see more of it since before I finished the last page and closed the book.  Fortunately, I have.  On her webpage, Martha Wells has made available a selection of novel excepts and short stories.  You should really check some of them out.  One of them is entitled “The Forest Boy“, and it’s a prequel to The Cloud Roads.  In that book we learned that the protagonist, Moon, had been orphaned as a young boy.  Because of his ability to shape shift, he was never able to settle down and find a home, instead continually being forced to leave because of the fear his other form caused the people around him.

In “The Forest Boy” we get to see an episode from Moon’s early life, one of the attempts he made to find a home and acceptance, and how jealousy drove him from it.

Instead of making Moon the viewpoint character, Wells has chosen instead to tell the story from the point of view of Tren.  Tren is one of six foster children adopted by Kaleb and his wife Ari.  The settlement where they live is along a trading route called the Long Road, and the children are primarily those abandoned along the road.

Tren and his foster sister Lua are searching the settlement’s midden when they discover Moon caught in a trap.  They get Kaleb, who frees Moon, takes him home, and oversees his recovery.  Moon is accepted into the family without question.

During the course of his recovery, Moon and Lua become quite close.  Since Tren had assumed he and Lua would one day be married, Lua’s growing relationship with Moon naturally causes problems.

That’s all I’ll say about the plot.  The story is a character driven one, not an action tale, although there is one fight scene near the end that was well done.  The choice to use Tren rather than Moon as the viewpoint character was a wise one.  If the story had been told by Moon, it would have simply rehashed things told in The Cloud Roads.  Instead, by focusing on a character who isn’t seen in the novel, and probably won’t ever be again, Wells breaks new ground by giving us a detailed look at the impact Moon has on the lives of the people he encounters.

Adolescence can be a turbulent time in the life of a person, and Wells shows in a few thousand words just how difficult and unsettling such a time is.  Tren’s feelings are complex, and even as he knows many of his feelings are unfounded and irrational, that doesn’t stop him from having them.  Or of despising the jealousy he feels even as it grows.  The ultimate lesson Tren learns, that things aren’t always what they seem, and that the people we envy often envy us for the things in our lives we take for granted, is a bitter lesson.  It’s one of life’s most powerful lessons, though.

Not only is Tren a fully developed character, but so is Lua, even though her character is revealed indirectly, through her words and actions, and not her thoughts.  Kaleb and Ari are shown to be loving, caring parents, even though they don’t get much stage time.

Finally, I found the descriptions of the round-trees and the brief mentions of the forest fauna lent an air of exoticism to the story reminiscent of the best ecology building of James H. Schmitz or Alan Dean Foster.  With only a few lines, I was transported to another world, different yet at the same time familiar enough that I could relate to it.

I still haven’t figured out if this series is ultimately going to turn out to be fantasy or science fiction, and at this point, I really don’t care.  I see elements of both, but that could be my training as a scientist imposing an order that may not be there.  It’s a fascinating world no matter how the stories are classified.  I’m looking forward to seeing more of it.

The Cloud Roads

The Cloud Roads
Martha Wells
Night Shade Books
Trade paperback, 278 p., $14.95
Various e-book formats

What’s that, you say?  You haven’t read Martha Wells?

Shame on you.

You’ve been missing out.  And The Cloud Roads is the perfect place to find out what you’ve been missing.  It’s a stand-alone, at least so far, although I hope it doesn’t stay that way.

This is a dense, complexly layered novel.  And that’s a good thing.  The story concerns Moon, an orphan who doesn’t know who or what he is.  Moon is a shape-shifter, able to take either the winged form you see on the gorgeous cover, or a humanoid shape called a groundling  because it’s wingless.  In his wanderings since his family was killed, he’s never come across any others of his kind.  The closest he’s come is a race called the Fell, who look a lot like his winged form.  Only the Fell are feared and hated by everyone.  They have the nasty tendency to move in, destroy a city, and eat the inhabitants.  Not exactly the best of neighbors; when the Fell move in, there really does go the neighborhood.

Not wanting to be mistaken for a Fell, Moon usually masquerades as a groundling, only taking to his winged form when no one is around.  Unfortunately, someone is, and he’s nearly killed before being rescued by another of his kind who has been watching him.

The other is Stone, and he’s amazed that Moon is alone.  He tells Moon he’s a Raksura.  They live in a colonies, like ants or bees, and have queens, warriors, and several other castes.  Moon is one of the consort caste.  Stone is also a consort, albeit a much older one than Moon.  Stone’s colony is dying, and he’s been searching for more consorts to come and join it.  And Moon is the only one he’s found.

And that’s when the fun really starts.  Colony politics, at least in Stone’s colony, are multi-layered, and the role Moon is expected to play is not an easy one.

And that’s all I’m going to say.  Part of the enjoyment of this novel was seeing how Wells unwrapped the culture of the colony, as well as the world, like an onion.  The further I read, the more depth there was.  There are enough characters for a Fat Fantasy.  Martha Wells does more with character development in less than 300 pages than many other writers do in twice as many pages.  Or even a thousand pages.

I wrote a few weeks ago about how I thought fantasy these days has more sense of wonder than science fiction.  This book proves my point.  This is a fascinating world, and I want to see more of it.  (Please, Martha.)  Her next book is titled The Serpent Sea, and will be coming out from Night Shade sometime next year.  I hope it’s set in this same world.  There are a number of races, not all of them humanoid, but none of the ones that were could really be called humans.  They all had slightly different traits.  Some had scales, some horns or tusks, some tails or claws.  I couldn’t help but be reminded of Larry Niven’s Ringworld and it’s sequels, in which a number of different races inhabit a huge artificial world, with different races living in different areas.  At times The Cloud Roads had that feel to it.  A vast world waiting to be explored.  We don’t see details of all the cultures, but they’re there in the ones we see up close.  We get hints of an ancient history that seems to have been forgotten by much of the population.  This was a fascinating place to visit.

I would also love to see this book filmed.  With the technology used in Avatar, this would be spectacular.  And this time the movie would actually have a story, not a plot outline of something that has been done a thousand times.  The shape-shifting would be mind-blowing.  And the aerial combat scenes….the mind boggles.

Which brings me to another point.  There’s plenty of action in this book, the majority of it in the air.  Martha Wells does action and adventure oriented fantasy like few people do.  Her plots are complex, and so are her characters.  The action and fight scenes move things along quickly, and it’s never dull.

To sum up.  The Cloud Roads was one of the most enjoyable full-length novels I’ve read in a long time.  The only other one I’ve read recently that comes close is Twelve, and that was such a different book that it’s hard to compare the two.  So buy and read The Cloud Roads.  And Martha Wells’ others if you haven’t already.  You won’t be disappointed.