Who gets to talk, when, and for whom is a conversation I can’t get enough of. For me this is one of the crucial elements of feminism (besides, you know, equal rights and control over one’s own body). It’s a conversation we don’t have enough in literature, though I’m glad we’re having it more often than we used to. And it’s something I started thinking deeply about this past week as I was finishing up reading I Am Cleopatra by Natasha Solomons and Cyborg Fever by Laurie Sheck.
Feminist Retellings of History in I Am Cleopatra
I Am Cleopatra starts strong, with the title character addressing us directly, “I want you to see me as I am. You can dislike me, love me or abhor me, but know me first. I was born a girl and a goddess. A future queen, if I should live that long.” It’s a compelling beginning for a character we’ve most often known through the men she loved or bedded (or both), and we certainly get to know Cleopatra more intimately than ever before.
The character Solomons portrays is intelligent and strategic. She’s also young and afraid. I enjoyed getting inside her motivations as her father courts the favor of the Romans, she marries her brother to become queen, she’s betrayed by that brother, and Caesar enters her life. She’s also human: menstruating and virginal when she first meets Caesar, having popped out of the laundry bag she was smuggled into her own palace inside. We see her acknowledge her own fears and work to overcome them in the name of her people. It’s a beguiling portrayal, even if (and maybe because) she is less the seductress than we’ve previously seen her be.
Through Cleopatra we get to know Charmian, the girl who has been her slave since they were both born. There is a class distinction here as Charmian is never a narrator in the story, though this Cleopatra does see the plight of the common people around her more than we might expect. That in and of itself is a nice change, though I wouldn’t say this queen is fully “woke.”
The other character who gets to narrate her own plight is Servilia, lover of Caesar (in Rome) and mother of Brutus. Servilia counsels the young princess on her first visit to Rome and then disappears from the book for awhile as Caesar mires himself in Egypt and Egyptian politics. We meet her again and in earnest when Caesar brings Cleopatra to Rome.
The absence of Servilia from much of the middle of the book is a flaw as I see it, because Servilia has a rich perspective of her own, and I was enjoying learning about Rome through her eyes. It’s also the crux of what makes me think about feminism and voice in this book. I love that (for once) this story is told in the voices of the women. I did not love that the action then revolves entirely around the men (especially Caesar). I understand why the book is structured this way, it follows the action and HIStory as we know it, but I wanted to stretch into something new, something that might have passed the Bechdel Test (and I wondered how far from history an author would have to venture to make that happen).
Myriad Voices in Cyborg Fever
In sharp contrast, Cyborg Fever by Laurie Sheck is a hybrid text that took me all kinds of places I never thought I would go. The voices in this book include Erwin (the narrator), a nun and a cyborg that talk to him, and Deadpool (who talks to the cyborg). Don’t let the ridiculous sound of that last sentence fool you, this book is intelligent and funny and I’m still pondering its meanings and ramifications.
“Maybe meaning lies in the not-understanding, in the ways things shut us out. All the ways that we remain unknowing.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever
I’m not going to lie, sometimes I got lost as Erwin’s musings covered entropy, Borges, orphan planets, Tesla, Einstein, the discovery of black holes, a nun who cannot attach to an infant, Professor Xavier (of the X-Men), musings on loneliness, the chemical roots of empathy, engineering humans for war, Laika, and so, so much more. There were hundreds of historical tidbits and tangents I wanted to track down, fact check, or follow. Sheck weaves them together artfully into a tantalizing exploration of what it means to be human and what comes next. But, as far as I can tell, she’s providing as many questions as answers (which makes the book far more interesting to read).
“To be knowledgeable is to know you cannot know.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever
I was particularly excited to read this book in this moment as I’ve been working with AI in my day job. It’s been instructive to see how information is collated, where errors get introduced into a system, and how much it seems like the engines prefer to be wrong than to admit not knowing. To me that is the fatal flaw, where growth stops, because the machines cannot then be curious. This limitation makes me wonder about the people who designed the systems, what their limits are.
“A map is a set of agreed-upon errors.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever
It was also interesting to ponder algorithms and how Erwin is getting introduced to his information. I spend a lot of time editing guides related to search engine optimization, so I get to see behind at least one of the curtains of how decisions are made for us online. It’s something I think a lot about as my son learns to navigate around the walled garden we’ve tried to create for him online.
“I didn’t realize algorithms can lead you from one topic to another without your suspecting you’re being lead—you just think you’re making choices.” – Laurie Sheck, Cyborg Fever
As much as this book introduced me to all kinds of wonderful and fascinating ideas, it really hit home for me with the Deadpool appearance. Not because I’m a Marvel superfan, but because I live with one; and nothing beats telling your 10-year-old at the breakfast table that the deep book you’ve been reading actually featured the star of the movie he had everyone watch last week (Once Upon a Deadpool—highly recommend if you are not a super hero fan but need something to watch with someone who is, because it works on many levels, like this book). The book also connected to Alien Earth (highly recommend this because no one does layered storytelling on TV like Noah Hawley) with the idea that “new kinds of bodies lead to new thoughts” and I was left wondering how close we are to a future of company towns in space and people who give their whole lives (and in some cases bodies) over to corporations. Shudder.
Although reading while exhausted was either the best way to encounter this story or the worst (definitely not in between), I appreciated how many voices came through and what a broad expanse of inquiry Sheck presented. It’s a book I will read again.
If you want to hear the voices of either of these books for yourself, I Am Cleopatra comes out on October 21 (but you can pre-order it now) and Cyborg Fever is available now from Bookshop.org. If you use those links to purchase, you’re keeping indie bookstores in business and I receive a commission.
I have no interest in dogging on books that make lots of people happy but just aren’t my bag. But am interested in learning from these books, as something can be learned from anything. A Sorceress Comes to Call by T. Kingfisher was one of those books for me. Loaned to me by a beloved relative, I read the book even after I figured out I was the wrong reader, because I was interested in why the book didn’t work for me.
Speaking of political violence, which is on a lot of our minds lately, I found a copy of A Burning by Megha Majumdar at the Little Free Library and dove right in. I’m not quite done with this one but it was interesting to feel how differently I related to the characters in this story of a young woman (Jivan) in India who is imprisoned for a terrorist act she did not commit.
Some dystopias are fictional and I got the chance to revisit this classic by Ray Bradbury recently as my 10-year-old son picked it out as one of his birthday books. I can tell he’s exploring someone’s canon of great books because he checked Frankenstein out from the school library more than ten times last year (and it’s in our home again already this year—though I have offered to buy him a copy). He struggled in the beginning as he couldn’t tell what was metaphor and what was a mapping of an unfamiliar world (someday he’ll be the book reviewer, I tell ya), but I think we were both enriched by reading this book (and by watching the Simpson’s Treehouse of Terror takeoff, though picturing Montag as Homer did shift things a bit for me).
The book that rounds out the puzzle in my brain today is The Bat-Poet by Randall Jerrell, illustrated by Maurice Sendak. This simple story of a bat who is finding ways to himself through writing came to me by
I can’t recall where I read about Barkskins, but as the daughter of a forester, the idea of reading about how timber has shaped our nation appealed to me. The book follows two (entwined, at times) families, one Mi’kmaw and one French from 1693 until almost the present day (though I haven’t reached actual nationhood for either the U.S. or Canada) as settlers clear the newly “discovered” land, first for the value of the timber, then for the sake of clearing.
In Brooklyn, Eilis is an intelligent young woman in post-war Ireland with very few prospects. Jobs are scarce and most of the energy of the young women in her village centers around getting married. Eilis is given the chance to move to Brooklyn where she encounters a whole new booming world. She has a job with the potential to move up, she has an education, there isn’t even (in the beginning) a marriage market to speak of. And there are exciting new goods to be bought for herself and her loved ones back home. All of her waking hours go to working or going to school, to the extent that I wondered how she would have time to build friendships or romantic relationships at all (I really was exhausted at times reading about the hours she kept, but also she didn’t have kids and I forget what that’s like).
My son has a book called There Must Be More Than That! by Shinsuke Yoshitake that’s all about choices. At the end the mom offers the daughter two types of eggs and the girl blows up, “Not just boiled or fried! There are more ways to make an egg than that!” and then lists dozens of other options. I love this book with all my heart because it reminds me how much we narrow our lives by just choosing between what we’ve seen before.
No one embraces and embodies the complexity better than Edan Lepucki, and Woman No. 17 delves deeper and with more nuance into the mother-child relationship than anything I’ve read in a long time. Motherhood is an obsession for Lepucki. From
I first heard of Mary Louise Kelly’s It. Goes. So. Fast.: The Year of No Do-Overs on the radio, duh, as NPR is often playing in my home and she is the much loved host of All Things Considered. I remember laughing at her anecdote about the school nurse calling her when she was on the tarmac in Iraq, insisting that she come and get her son. I remember also relating to the deep push-pull that inhabited her interview (and this book) between living for your children and living for yourself. That sounds selfish to me when I type it, and maybe that’s part of the problem as I’ve been trying for all these years to figure out how to be myself and a mother and an artist and a wife and sometimes Corporate Barbie. It’s a lot. It’s so much less, even, than Kelly is doing, and I loved having this insight into her world and her thought process.