Author: Sylvain Neuvel
Year: 2019 (2018)
Publisher: Brombergs Bokförlag
Language: Swedish (Translator Peter Samuelsson)
”Bara människa” (”Only Human”) is the third and final tome of the Themis Files-series by the Canadian translator and writer Sylvain Neuvel. Unlike its two predecessors, important portions of the story are set on a planet other than Tellus and offer glimpses into the enigmatic society that constructed the powerful robot which, thousands of years later, came to wreak havoc here on earth.
The third part
also introduces yet another tempo, adding to the variation already established
between parts one and two. At times, “Bara människa” almost reads like a
political treatise veiled in the guise of fiction, a scathing but unoriginal critique
of the contemporary political landscape. Through the prism of the
extraterrestrial society that we get to know after the robot Themis is summoned
to return to her home planet in the opening of the book, Neuvel casts a probing
light on what he presumably perceives as political failures in our time on our
own planet in general, and perhaps North America in particular.
As a
politically interested and active person, I followed his musings and the political
dialogue with a certain degree of satisfaction.
SPOILER
My senses
were particularly titillated by the revelation that some of the narrative unfolds
among the shoals and islets of my home town south of Stockholm. Yet, this
sequence struck a chord particularly close to my marrow bearing in mind Sweden’s
recent accession to NATO and the associated concerns about our nation’s safety
and territorial sanctity. In one scene, both poignant and perturbing, the
Swedish navy officer Captain Lucas Nilsson is interrogated (Neuvel was kind
enough to label File 2157 a “debriefing”) by a US army colonel. Upon questioning
this audacious intrusion by foreigners on Swedish jurisdiction, the captain’s
concerns are unceremoniously dismissed by the American who makes it perfectly
clear that the chain of command is what the North American super power desires
it to be in any given situation and depends very little on national sovereignty
and established hierarchies. “Let’s not waste our time pretending that you have
a choice”. A taste of what is to come for our armed forces, perhaps.
More
lamentable still, is the sorrowful void of missed opportunity that lingers in
Nevuel’s lack of interest in the planet that he has created and the customs and
culture of the lifeforms that presumably inhabit it. The same lifeforms that
are capable of a technology with a destruction power that could annihilate our
entire civilisation in a matter of days.
Amidst the
passage of several years, the protagonists are enveloped in an extraterrestrial
environment never before seen by a human eye and yet squander the precious gift
of curiosity in favour of petty squabbles and relational discord. It borders on
travesty to plant Vincent Couture, a renowned linguist, on a different planet
for years and fail to arm him with any interest at all in learning the local language.
Instead, he chooses to impart the gift of broken English upon a native youth.
In lieu of an epic odyssey of discovery we are left with the banality of bickering
and self-pity. The only lasting impression from their years as celestial
voyagers seems to be the memory of escape and the interpersonal dynamics
between the persons themselves, sadly devoid of the transformative significance
typically expected from such an otherworldly experience. Indeed, a squandered
opportunity born of what seems to be the writer’s want of artistic ambition and
a lacklustre visionary capacity.
Within this
hollow discourse, one single vaguely shining pearl of meaningful knowledge
emerges from the void. It is a cautionary tale woven from the strict ideal of
non-involvement in the affairs of other civilisations and the hubris of attempting
to rectify trespasses of the past. This part explains much of what transpired
in the first two books whilst calling forth a host of ponderous queries. To
what extent can a living creature, however intelligent, foresee the outcomes of
their actions? What responsibility accrues to those who wield the sceptre of power?
Similar to
the first two books, the narrative through interrogation recordings, diary
entries, and secret files, continues to fail. In the end, it is obvious that
the writer, careening toward the abyss of chaos, simply capitulated and allowed
the last couple of chapters to fizzle out in the mundanity of happenstance encounters
between people in shops and on the street while the headlines keep enumerating
file numbers for no apparent reason. It has long become unclear who records
these conversations, by what means, and for what purpose.
The Themis
Files, alas, appears to me as a distinct disappointment, a discordant note in
the in the symphony of excellence otherwise associated with the esteemed
publisher Brombergs Förlag. One cannot help but wonder whether The Themis Files
constituted an experiment or a gamble for Brombergs. Though I sincerely hope
that the venture met with financial success, I cannot deny that it put a bit of
a dent in my confidence in the brand.
On a
positive note, I am pleased to take this opportunity to trumpet Lee Gibbons’ riveting
cover art which captures, per chance, the splendour and mystery of what this
trilogy could have been in the hands of a more skilled writer.
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