Charles Eric Maine (real name David McIlwain) was a pioneer of British sci fi in the late Forties through to his early death in 1981. To my mind, only John Wyndham is better. Maine's gift is for very near future cataclysm brought on by man's reckless technical innovations. In The Tide Went Out nuclear tests crack the earth's crust and all the water drains away. Here - startlingly - a covid virus develops in the Far East and becomes a worldwide pandemic. In reaction, governments hugely restrict personal freedom and protect the elite in secure underground bunkers.
The relevance is so extreme that even this British Library reprint predates Covid 19. The novel itself came out in 1962. I mean ... wow! OK, there are differences. For one thing there are always two versions of the Hueste virus; one which kills in hours, another which is harmless to the victim, granting them immunity but making them carriers. Actually, that second version sounds very much like Covid 19, now I come to think about it. The other major difference is that the underclass rise up in rebellion when they are effectively left to die by the state. Of course, Maine wrote before social media - indeed, before absolutely every household had a TV.
As ever, once he has set up his disaster, Maine personalises it through characters at the heart of the dilemma. He does so especially well in The Darkest of Nights. Pauline Brant works for the International Virus Research Organisation (IVRO) in Tokyo, and is thus on hand when the virus first begins to spread. She is sent back to England where she reunites with her husband Clive, Foreign editor for a major Fleet Street newspaper. Clive has been offered a gig in America and wants a divorce so he can marry the boss's daughter. Pauline asks for time to think it over. Then the virus comes to Britain and Pauline is subsumed back into IVRO where she meets DR 'Vince' Vincent. The triangle plays out to very end, with a twist I didn't foresee.
Whilst not perhaps the Maine novel closest to my academic interests (that remains Spaceways), The Darkest of Nights is a better novel than The Tide Went Out, itself very good. My appetite for more is whetted and fortunately series editor Mike Ashley includes some useful pointers in his introduction.
No comments:
Post a Comment