The Deep (Crowley novel)

The Deep is a 1975 speculative fiction novel by American writer John Crowley. The novel is set in a medieval world where the two factions, the "Reds" and the "Blacks", struggle for supremacy through battle. Crowley has said that his first, unfinished, novel was about the Wars of the Roses, but this novel owes more to the life and wars of Edward II.

Cover of the first edition, published by Doubleday. Cover art by John Cayea.[1]

Plot

A visitor arrives in the conflict between the two factions, the "Reds" and the "Blacks". It soon becomes apparent that he (it) is only superficially human. Damaged in a skirmish between Protectors and the Just at the start, he and we spend the rest of the book finding out how and why he was made and sent. Early, Fauconred quotes their book: "the world is founded on a pillar which is founded on the Deep". This turns out to be true.

Whilst a war of succession plays out, the visitor becomes secretary, then recorder; and travels to the edge of the world to meet Leviathan, an immemorial creature who built the world to shelter his sleep from the heaven stones. Meanwhile, the slow stable world which has been immortal because repeating for uncounted years begins to spiral into the unknown path of development.

Reception

Critics Brian W. Aldiss and David Wingrove praised The Deep as "a remarkable first novel, well written and darkly true to human nature." They described it as "a complex novel of many layers [whose] people live and breathe and die horribly in [its] pages.[2]

gollark: Okay, unless I made a mistake somewhere, the concrete crafter only does a single peripheral call per second unless it is actually crafting.
gollark: Actually, I programmed the concrete crafter... I'm relatively sure every second it only calls list on an adjacent chest, though.
gollark: Also by suspiciously sandless rivers.
gollark: Keansian visitors will be awed by roads slightly faster than switch city ones as far as the eye can see.
gollark: Different.

References

  1. http://webpages.charter.net/jsa1/jcrowley/jcrowley2.html
  2. "Aldiss & Wingrove, Trillion Year Spree, Victor Gollancz, 1986, p.453

Further reading

  • Alice K. Turner; Michael Andre-Druissi (January 2003). Snake's Hands: The Fiction of John Crowley. Wildside Press LLC. ISBN 978-1-59224-051-7.
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