Friday, June 12, 2015

Australian Science Fiction: Spare Parts, Sally Rogers-Davidson

I saw this book described online and I was intensely curious about it.  I'm glad I read it, but I don't know that I would describe it as a good book.  Still, an interesting near-future premise, and a very excellent job of worldbuilding a split society grappling with transgenetics and cyber-life.  

Spare Parts
Sally Rogers-Davidson
ISBN: 9781471095382
Shortlisted for the 1999 Aurealis Award, and a Notable Australian Children's Book for 2000.

Kelty lives in Melbourne, lower Melbourne to be exact.  She's a subby, and lives on the street level of the city, as far from the rich in their beautiful towers as night is from day.  She's been toying with the idea of getting away from her limited prospects by joining the Space Exploration Program; a move that will require her to transplant her mind into a cyborg body capable of withstanding the rigors of space.  Her decision is made more urgent when her best friend is gravely injured in a boiler accident, and Kelty's young, beautiful, virginal body is the only thing she owns of enough value to help pay for her friend's necessary medical treatments.  

This was a delightful premise, and the worldbuilding and sociology was deft and interesting.  The class divisions between the subbies and the Skywalkers were realistic and individual, while the concerns and moral questions raised about the morals of body-shopping and becoming a cyborg were interspersed with more philosophical questions about citizenship and choice and social currencies.

The story itself was not as interesting as it could have been.  Despite being quite frank about sexuality and body image/nakedness (this book would never ever ever fly as a children's book in the prudish  USA), the actual plot is rather disappointingly simplistic and naive.  Kelty sees a problem, sets out to overcome it, and does so.  There aren't really any huge roadblocks or massive difficulties in her way; by contrast, she's constantly helped by the people she meets, and even the "twist" of the story is a benign one.  I would have appreciated a bit more peril, to be quite honest.  

Still, it was interesting and thought-provoking, and I'm glad to have read it.


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