For me, science fiction needs to evoke a convincing reality,
even though it may describe improbable situations on worlds completely removed
from our own. One of the great
accomplishments of No Enemy but Time,
by Michael Bishop (1982), is that its account of a young man who travels 2.5
million years in time back to the African past is convincing. The normality of what Bishop describes, in
language that is neither hyperbolic or understated and that evokes a convincing
reality set in the Pleistocene world with early pre-human and human species,
impressed this reader. Certain elements
in the novel may stretch one’s credibility: the main character Joshua Kampa,
whom we follow from his infancy to middle age, is a “spirit dreamer,” an
extremely rare kind of person who can dream back and forward in time. Joshua’s dream visions are of Pleistocene
Africa. The U. S. military has already
learned about the existence of spirit dreamers and is trying to exploit them
for, one presumes, use in warfare. The military develops technology that uses
Joshua’s dreaming ability to transport him back to the Pleistocene past, where
he studies the behavior of prehistoric hominids. Bishops account of Joshua’s
experiences in the Pleistocene are vivid and interesting. Mainly they are about his life with a small
group of hominids, and his close relationship to one of them in particular.
The novel moves back and forth in time from Joshua’s life
growing up in the United States to his experiences in Pleistocene Africa. This is
an effective narrative strategy, especially given that the nature of time is
one of its concerns: the interrelatedness of past and present. The novel is
also about the nature of human identity, the importance of human speech, and
the point at which pre-humans became human.
My one complaint with the novel is that its final chapters
provided an unsatisfying resolution—they don’t measure up to the Pleistocene
sections. The depictions of the fictional African country of Zarakal border on being
satirical, and Joshua’s interactions with and attitudes towards the hominids
with whom he lives sometimes seem patronizing or colonial (if that is the right
word). Bishop apparently means the fact that Joshua is African by birth to be
significant, as he returns to his ancestral birthplace in the distant African
past. However, since all races are
descended from African hominids, his African identity is not essential to the
success of the novel.
No Enemy but Time
won the 1982 Nebula Award for Best Novel, one of the leading recognitions for
science fiction.
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