Rating: Not rated
Tags: Hugo Award, Science Fiction, SF Masterworks, Locus Award, Lang:en
Summary
A science-fiction fantasy in the guise of an old-fashioned
Victorian novel, complete with epigraphs, brief outlines, and
a rather ugly boxer in three-quarters profile at the start of
each chapter. Or is it a Victorian novel in the guise of a
time-travelling tale, or a highly comic romp, or a great,
allusive literary game, complete with spry references to
Dorothy L. Sayers, Wilkie Collins, and Arthur Conan Doyle?
Its title is the subtitle of Jerome K. Jerome's singular, and
hilarious, Three Men in a Boat. In one scene the hero, Ned Henry, and his friends come
upon Jerome, two men, and the dog Montmorency in - you
guessed it - a boat. Jerome will later immortalise Ned's
fumbling. (Or, more accurately, Jerome will earlier
immortalise Ned's fumbling, because Ned is from the 21st
century and Jerome from the 19th.) What Connie Willis soon makes clear is that genre can go
to the dogs.
To Say Nothing of the Dog is a fine, and fun,
romance--an amused examination of conceptions and
misconceptions about other eras, other people. When we first
meet Ned, in 1940, he and five other time jumpers are
searching bombed-out Coventry Cathedral for the bishop's bird
stump, an object about which neither he nor the reader will
be clear for hundreds of pages. All he knows is that if they
don't find it, the powerful Lady Schrapnell will keep sending
them back in time, again and again and again. Once he's been
whisked through the rather quaint Net back to the Oxford
future, Ned is in a state of super time-lag. The only way Ned
can get the necessary two weeks' R and R is to perform one
more drop and recuperate in the past, away from Lady
Schrapnell. Once he returns something to someone (he's too
exhausted to understand what or to whom) on June 7, 1888,
he's free. Willis is concerned, however, as is her confused
character, with getting Victoriana right, and Ned makes a
good amateur anthropologist - entering one crowded room, he
realises that "the reason Victorian society was so restricted
and repressed was that it was impossible to move without
knocking something over." Though he's still not sure what
he's supposed to bring back, various of his confederates keep
popping back to set him to rights.
To Say Nothing of the Dog is a shaggy-dog tale
complete with a preternaturally quiet, time-travelling cat,
Princess Arjumand, who might well be the cause of some
serious temporal incongruities - for even a mouser might
change the course of European history. In the end, readers
might well be more interested in Ned's romance with a fellow
historian than in the bishop's bird stump, and who will not
rejoice in their first Net kiss, which lasts 169 years! 1999 Hugo Award
1999 Locus Award
SF Masterworks #120