Wednesday, December 2, 2020

The Raven

Ann Leckie

A story where the narrator is a god, and an ancient god at that. In fact, it is two stories. The first person account of the god's experience over history in discovering its self-identity and learning to interact with people, and a specific event story about a town in political transition where the actions of the gods is integral. This definitely gave me American Gods vibes, but was way better. I loved the development of identity of the god. How it discovered that it had power, and how that power worked. By definition, anything that a god proclaims must be true. So, the god must be careful to only say true things or, if a statement of fact is made that is not currently true, it will then become true. This is the creation process of sorts. For example, if a god says "All trees are made of metal", it is clearly not true now. So the in order to keep the god status, trees become made of metal. And the amount of power that this requires must be taken into account. Likely this statement would actually kill the god, since turning all trees to metal would take more power than the god has available. So you can see that it is tricky being a god, and takes great care in what is said. With this line of thinking about how gods work, it does allow for an interesting thought experiment about the Christian creation story. Perhaps God was not "creating" most of the time, but stating already true facts about the universe?

While this may seem like a genre departure for Leckie from her space opera Imperial Radch Trilogy (which I loved), it in fact has many themes that overlap. As a reader, I was thinking about power and responsibility, and challenged with my preconceptions about gender throughout. Leckie may be one of my favorite authors.

4 stars (out of 4)

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