Ratings37
Average rating3.3
This is one of those books that leave me undecided about whether I like it or not. (I'm giving a three-star to be generous.) I loved the idea of an alternate universe where the silent movie era is coupled with space travel. Wonderfully imaginative idea, I thought. It's Georges Méliès-inspired like the Scorsese film, Hugo. I would have enjoyed a straight-forward narrative but I'm open to experimental styles too, if there's something intense or profound or even humorous for me to grab onto. Lines like this made me think there would be humor throughout:“She is dead. Almost certainly dead. Nearly conclusively dead. She is, at the very least, not answering her telephone.”But that was the only time I got a little laugh.Valente offers a pastiche of media styles. Each individual chapter is inspired by any number of styles such as: Classic Hollywood, children's animation, commercials, film noir, documentary footage, celebrity gossip columns, gothic tales, science fiction, steampunk, not to mention fairy tales and mythology. She has a distinct prose style that's almost lyrical or poetic. It's not enough to make me fall in love with the book, but I can see how it stands out from the ordinary. There are a lot of broader concepts that the author touched upon. First there are the characters like filmmaker Percy and his daughter Severin who cannot exist without having their lives recorded on media. Percy even goes so far as to have events, such as Severin arriving as an infant in a basket, restaged so he can catch them on film. There's also characters who mix their fiction with reality, embodied by actress Mary Pelham, who tries to emulate the film detective she plays on screen to solve “real-life” mysteries.Beyond individual characters, the world of Radiance has Imperialism in the form of Earth nations that have now taken over solar system planets. There's also the propaganda to influence the masses with the product Callowmilk. Along with this is some environmental commentary about using animals for their products. Then there is the conspiracy with the disappeared civilizations and people on the various planets. That's a lot of things for Radiance to be about, and it doesn't take any of them very far. The novel goes wide but not deep.Throughout, Valente makes meta comments about story types and the nature of stories. The main takeaway is that stories don't have endings. “There is no such thing as an ending. There are no answers. We collect the pieces where we can, obsessively assemble and reassemble them, searching for a picture that only ever comes in parts. And we cling to those parts.”What I'm looking for is for each of the parts to be interesting on their own as well, if parts is all we get. With the exception of the mythology of Anchises, most of the mini-stories didn't engage me. An example of fiction done in a meta style that did work for me was Auster's [b:The New York Trilogy 431 The New York Trilogy Paul Auster https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1386924429l/431.SX50.jpg 2343071]. I recognized it for what it was but I was also very involved with the stories.Radiance reminds me of a film beautiful to look at, something like Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, which had innovative and amazing effects for the time. After watching for a while, I realized that the characters and plot were just not that intriguing. Years have passed, and all I can remember is the visual style.