For many years I’ve admired the science fiction works of J.G. Ballard, but I’d never got around to reading his non-sf novel The Day Of Creation (1987). I have now corrected that oversight.
The story is narrated by Dr Mallory, who is working for the WHO
in an unnamed central African republic, near the River Kotto, yet on the edge
of the encroaching Sahara. Inevitably, political and native unrest has
overtaken him and the villagers in the guise of General Harare and his guerrillas.
Mallory is about to be executed when the arrival of Captain Kagwa and his
government troops rout the terrorists.
Shortly afterwards, as a landing strip is being bulldozed by
Kagwa’s men, a huge tree is uprooted and water gushes out from the new hole. It
doesn’t stop, but steadily floods the area, moving over the land. The blessing
of this fresh water’s arrival affects Mallory strangely; he christens the new
river with his name. Together with a twelve-year-old girl guerrilla he calls
Noon, he escapes from Kagwa and commandeers a boat to head up the new river to
find its source. Before long, he is also accompanied by a myopic filmmaker and
his assistant.
We’re soon in the territory of an unreliable narrator.
Perhaps the first clue is naming the ‘river’ after himself. ‘The River Mallory. I felt a curious pride.
Yet knowing that it bore my name made me
all the more determined to destroy it.’ (p71)
He attempted to defeat the river at the place of its ‘mouth’ but
failed, so realised he must find its source in the mountains. Yet,
ambivalently, ‘I was eager to see how it would grow and change.’ (p99)
Over time, the river becomes polluted with the rubbish from
civilization – fridges, bottles, condoms, and the usual detritus found in a
Ballard disaster novel: ‘the aerosol can and the hair-dryer, lying in the sand
like objects displayed in a museum of consumer archaeology’ (p220). Is the
River Mallory a metaphor for something? Maybe: man creates, then spoils,
sullies and ultimately destroys?
Ballard writes ‘literary’ novels – presumably books with
profound psychological depth, a message and telling metaphors. Here, there are
metaphors on virtually every page. A few are strained, such as ‘I stared at the
sleek swollen surface of the river, like the fleshy body of a sleeping woman’
(p112), but the majority tend to work.
Here are a few of his many metaphors:
‘Fires burned fiercely across the surface of the lake, the
convection currents sending up plumes of jewelled dust that ignited like the
incandescent tails of immense white peacocks.’ (p20)
‘Angry voices crossed the airstrip, an altercation that
moved like a skidding stylus from French to German to Sudanese.’ (p50)
‘… cadavers in the dissection room, laid out on the glass
tables like the forgotten patrons of a Turkish bath who had waited too long for
physicians…’ (p70)
‘The trees leaned over the water, their roots exposed like
chandeliers…’ (p92)
‘The huge trees advanced towarfds the water like an army of
knights…’ (p92)
‘Hours had slipped by in seconds, falling like dust through
the open grilles of my mind.’ (p106)
‘Two metal aircraft hangars stood in the grass, their
curved, pockmarked roofs like the hulls of collapsed Zeppelins.’ (p224)
It’s interesting that in one point Mallory refers to Noon as
a teenager, yet she isn’t; she’s twelve, pre-pubescent. She is often naked,
diving for fish to feed them on their journey up-river, and Mallory seems to
lust after her, though whether anything happens in fact is debatable as he
becomes disoriented by disease and malnutrition. Bordering on unsavoury
territory, here, perhaps.
There are moments of humour, when Noon attempts to learn
English by listening to cassette tapes, though these are all Marxist
indoctrination lessons for Captain Kagwa! ‘Exploitation!’ becomes her word of
warning of danger.
Ballard’s lush description of the jungle and the ‘dream river’,
aided by rich metaphor create good visuals, though the characters seem less
substantial than the environment, perhaps because they’re translated through
the fragile sanity of the narrator. Imagery supplants plot; Ballard’s
imagination is seen to be formidable through his revealing prose.
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