rushthatspeaks: (Default)
[personal profile] rushthatspeaks
I never know how well known Molly Gloss is. Her work is so unclassifiable, is the thing, you get the explicitly Quaker science fiction of The Dazzle of Day, or else whatever you might call the magnificently indescribable Wild Life (one of those books where nothing I can say will tell you, go read it). Apparently her last two have both been Westerns or something (I have one of them here to read later).

This is her first novel and so far her only children's, and I heard of it because Ursula Le Guin wrote a review of it lo these years ago, which you can read in Dancing at the Edge of the World, and it is a very complimentary review. So I finally found a copy of Outside the Gates.

There are the Gates, and a boy has been put outside them, because he has a Shadow, and the people are frightened of it. His Shadow is not to speak the languages of animals, because animals speak mostly by smell and other things a human cannot duplicate, but to befriend animals, to know them the way they know themselves. In the woods there are other people, who have also been put out, though not many, and one, who works weather, becomes the boy's father, until someone comes whose Shadow truly is a Shadow, truly is dark, and truly has power.

This sounds like many other books, I know. It isn't. This is a book with no word out of its proper place, full of the thing Molly Gloss does better than any writer I can think of, the intensely self-contained, practical silence of the wilderness when it does not have much to do with human people. It is also one of those stories which looks simple, and then twists on you: it is as simple as a stone, or a bone, things like that, if you see what I mean. There is some kinship here to Le Guin, to A Wizard of Earthsea, but this reads as though Gloss took that beautiful book and read it and swallowed it and then took some ideas from it in another direction entirely, honed them down to the pith of themselves, in language so spare it has the internal effect, sometimes, of silence.

And yet I do think I could have read this at the age I first read A Wizard of Earthsea, seven or eight, or younger; there is nothing here that I would not have gotten then, there is nothing here I think would be too subtle for a younger kid.

I recommend it of course to anyone. It will stay with you.

Date: 2011-05-01 02:53 pm (UTC)
coffeeandink: (Default)
From: [personal profile] coffeeandink
I love this book and I wish it weren't so obscure. I don't think it ever even had a paperback reprinting, not even in the post-Potter goldrush.

Date: 2011-05-02 02:47 pm (UTC)
oracne: turtle (Default)
From: [personal profile] oracne
I wish this would get reprinted, too. I have a used copy that is not in the best of shape.

I totally stalked her one time when she came to WisCon, and finally got up the courage to get my copy of WILD LIFE signed. She was most befuddled to be stalked. DOES SHE NOT REALIZE SHE IS TEH AWESOME?!

Date: 2011-05-01 06:16 pm (UTC)
larryhammer: floral print origami penguin, facing left (Default)
From: [personal profile] larryhammer
I haven't managed to track down a copy of this. I adore Dazzle of Day (as I would), and like Wild Life. The one western of hers I read (ETA: The Hearts of Horses) was odd, though of course quite lovely, and I need to reread it to figure out what I think of it. Gloss is pretty on my autobuy when found list.

---L.
Edited Date: 2011-05-02 03:01 am (UTC)

haunting & amazing

Date: 2013-03-03 01:57 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
It will stay with you indeed...
I read it when I was in 4th grade, and over the years (more than 20) have looked for it.
My mother found me a copy on Amazon (hardcover, so you may by right) and I read it again immediately.

I have not read her other work, but this book stirs me up. Let it stir you too...

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