The Islanders by Christopher Priest Book Review

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On stranger tides

Release Date: 22 September 2011
432 pages | £12.99 (hardback)/£6.99 (eBook)
Author: Christopher Priest
Publisher: Gollancz

Christopher Priest isn’t a writer who favours either conventional plotlines or narrators you can trust. Or even places you can trust. The Dream Archipelago is a recurring setting in his fiction, a collection of islands that’s impossible to map accurately from the air because of “distortion” caused by “temporal gradients”. Perhaps a gazetteer would help clarify matters?

Not if The Islanders , Priest’s first novel for eight years, is anything to go by. Introduced by writer Chaster Kammeston, a key figure in what follows, it purports to be a guide to the islands. And at times it is, as the novel sometimes offers up pithy chapters that describe both wonders and - particularly in the case of deadly insects called thrymes - horrors. Initially this is confusing, but gradually patterns begin to emerge and, in longer chapters that often read like self-contained short stories, a wider narrative begins to develop. At its heart lies a killing and a doomed love affair.

Or at least that’s how it seems on first reading. You could as easily say it’s a novel about the conceptual artist and obsessive tunneller Yo, who turns an island into a musical instrument. (The making of art is a recurring theme here, helping to give the novel a near-recursive quality.)

That’s probably partly the point, because Priest certainly isn’t a writer who believes in making things easy for his readers. Which isn’t the same as saying this is an overly difficult book: rather it’s giddying, fascinating, a hugely accomplished slipstream novel.

Jonathan Wright

SFX Magazine is the world's number one sci-fi, fantasy, and horror magazine published by Future PLC. Established in 1995, SFX Magazine prides itself on writing for its fans, welcoming geeks, collectors, and aficionados into its readership for over 25 years. Covering films, TV shows, books, comics, games, merch, and more, SFX Magazine is published every month. If you love it, chances are we do too and you'll find it in SFX.

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