Soonchild by Russell Hoban, illustrated by Alexis Deacon
(Walker Books)
HC RRP 27.95
ISBN 9781406329919
Reviewed by Anastasia
Gonis
Sixteen-Face John is a
shaman that lives north of the Arctic Circle. His wife, No Problem is expecting
a baby that she’s named Soonchild, because it should be born soon, but won’t be
born until it hears the World Songs that welcome all newborns.
John has lost many of his
abilities since he started drinking Coca-Cola, reading magazines with
centrefolds in them, and watching television. He sets out on a quest with the
help of a strong dose of Big Dream Brew, Ukpika, a benevolent owl spirit, lots
of spirit ancestors. He treks through frozen lands and years and is faced with many
challenges and awakenings, before he finds the World Songs and returns with
them so his child can be born.
This stunning jacketed book
is Russell Hoban’s last novel completed before his death in December 2011, and
was released by Walker in April 2012. Alexis Deacon’s haunting and mesmerising
pencil illustrations pay tribute to Hoban’s most outstanding work.
Soonchild is
an expedition into a foreign place; a trek into the spirit world of Inuit
mythology, and the buried places of the mind and spirit where one’s deepest
thoughts lie. It is frequently humorous, then dark but distilled. It provokes
an examination of self as it takes you to places of stillness and silence to
reveal the uniqueness of each being.
Every reader will come
away with a different opinion of this extraordinary piece of work. One thing
that we might all agree on is that profound and thought-provoking philosophical
messages weave through the text, that once read, will call you back again and
again. I closed the cover agreeing with Patrick Ness’ quote, ‘Hoban is the best
sort of genius.’
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